In 1991, Fishers opened a brand new Town Hall. That Town Hall became a City Hall in 2015 when Fishers became a city. In 2022, that building was demolished to make way for a new Arts Center/City Hall.
The demolition of the old City Hall was done recently, and Wednesday was the official groundbreaking ceremony for the start of construction on the new building.
HSE High School student Norah Wills provided the main address at the ceremony, and emphasized the importance of a central, public building in any community.
“In the wake of the pandemic, now more than ever, it is vital for our community to provide and maintain such a gathering space,” Wills told those gathered for the groundbreaking. “We have seen how polarizing distance can be. Because of that, the significance of a centralized building for the people has only become more apparent. We realize the importance of supporting a thriving community in which everyone can identify and participate.”
The new Arts Center/City Hall is scheduled to open in the spring season of 2024.
Mayor Scott Fadness speaks at the groundbreaking ceremony
Cecilia Coble has served as an at-large member of the City Council ever since Fishers became a city in 2015, and she will be asking voters to return her to the Council for another 4-year term. Coble’s name will be on the Republican primary ballot in May of 2023.
“I am proud of the work the Disability Committee has done to champion inclusion, accessibility, and in providing more housing and employment opportunities for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities in Fishers,” said Coble in a campaign news release. “It’s led to helping other cities implement the same approach, which is making an impact for the disability community in Hamilton County and beyond.”
Coble is the first Latina to serve on a Fishers Town or City Council and was the first woman to be elected Council President in 2020 and 2021.
“Cecilia has been an important leader on our council, and our city’s success is a reflection of that,” said Mayor Scott Fadness.
Coble says she plans to continue focusing on diversifying Fishers’ tax base in order to keep resident’s taxes low, ensure police and fire have the resources they need, and that the city invests in quality of life opportunities.
Giving Tuesday is a long-standing tradition set aside for supporting nonprofit organizations.
If you live in Fishers, you will almost certainly find a deserving group to support financially through the Fishers Nonprofit Coalition. You can find a listing of all those in that organization at this link.
I will point to one local nonprofit that has been supporting local teachers and students for many years. I would encourage you to support the Hamilton Southeastern Educuation Foundation at this link.
Any way you choose to give and to whichever charity you choose, support people doing good work in the local community by supporting their work on Giving Tuesday.
Sarah Sandquist can look back with pride on her time as Fishers Director of Parks and Recreation. But that journey ends with her last day on the job December 1st. Sarah is preparing to take on the position of Executive Director of Parks & Recreation in the City of Champaign, Illinois.
Sarah recorded a podcast with me looking forward to her new job and looking back on her years in Fishers.
In some of the communities near Fishers, candidates are beginning to announce their intention to run for city council, yet no one has made an official announcement as of Sunday night of their intention to run for a Fishers council seat.
All 9 council seats are up for election in 2023, with 3 at-large and 6 running in their respective districts.
A few candidates have privately told me of plans to run for city council, but so far none are prepared to make an official announcement.
John Tuohy of the Indianapolis Star posted a story on the newspaper’s Web site a few days ago quoting Democrat At-Large Councilor Jocelyn Vare as saying she is undecided on her next decision in public life, which is exactly what Ms. Vare told me several days ago.
Councilor Vare just finished a campaign for the state senate which she lost to Republican Kyle Walker. She had a dose of political reality on how difficult it is to win a political office when outspent in campaign money nearly 10-1.
Vare would not speculate on any run for mayor. Hamilton County Democratic Chair Dayna Colbert told reporter Tuohy her party expects to field a candidate for Mayor of Fishers. One major challenge for any Democrat would be fund raising.
Republican Scott Fadness, the only mayor Fishers has ever known since becoming a city in 2015, told me in a recent podcast he is not prepared to make an announcement on whether he will seek re-election but plans to disclose his plans in a few weeks. However, all the tea leaves point to Fadness seeking another term.
Assuming Mayor Fadness runs for another term, any Democratic opponent will face the same challenge Jocelyn Vare faced in her state senate campaign. Fadness has shown he is able to raise lots of campaign cash in any re-election bid.
I would expect city council candidates, including incumbents, will be announcing their intentions as the candidate filing time approaches early next year. Just as one election cycle closed in early November, we are headed into another election cycle.
As I have written many times before, pay attention to your local elections and vote! Your local government is the closest one to you. Plan now for your vote in the May primary and November general election in 2023. I will do my best to update you on all the Fishers political news as we move into the new year.
When COVID first hit Indiana, you may recall that testing was an important ingredient to have in order to run a business or just have people gather at all. Well before there were vaccines or effective treatments for COVID, testing was key.
Fishers Mayor Scott Fadness acted to fill the testing gap by creating his own city health department, something rarely done in Indiana. He took a great deal of heat from other elected officials in Hamilton County for that decision, but Fishers immediately setup a COVID testing program well before those tests were available to citizens in other parts of Indiana and Hamilton County.
I bring this up because Indiana state lawmakers have an important decision to make in the 2023 session of the General Assembly. It centers on how much money the state should spend on public health.
Reporter Peter Blanchard of the Indianapolis Business Journal (IBJ) wrote an extensive piece in the November 25th edition about public health in the Hoosier state and one man at the center of that discussion – former State Senator Luke Kenley. He was appointed a co-chair of the Governor’s Public Health Commission by Governor Eric Holcomb.
Kenley represented Noblesville and a part of Fishers for many years in the Indiana Senate and wielded great power and influence as Chair of the Indiana Senate Finance Committee. Just about anything dealing with state money had to go through that committee.
Reporter Blanchard provides a good background of Kenley’s influence during his time in the General Assembly. But after 5 years of leaving his elected post, Kenley is now in a position to play a key role in Indiana’s public health future.
To be blunt, Indiana’s standing of taking care of Hoosiers’ health is not a good one. Blanchard cites data to prove the point.
“Indiana’s poor public health outcomes have been well-documented for years,” Blanchard writes. “The overall health of Hoosiers has been steadily declining since the early ’90s, when Indiana ranked 26th in the nation for overall health outcomes. Today, the state ranks 40th overall in public health outcomes, with higher-than-average rates of obesity, smoking, infant mortality and maternal mortality.”
Blanchard then refers to a 2021 report ranking Indiana 48th among the states for spending on public health. That amounts to public health spending of $55 per Indiana resident, with $374 million dollars total spent every year by Indiana. The per-person spending on the average among American states is $91, with our state spending $36 per person less than the national average.
Kenley is quoted in the IBJ story as saying he was “somewhat shocked” at these numbers and wasn’t aware how far behind Indiana is on public health spending while serving in the Indiana Legislature. Democrats serving with Kenley during his time in office are quoted by Blanchard as saying they brought public health spending up numerous times during Kenley’s tenure chairing the Finance Committee, including citing several pieces of legislation proposed by Democrats that never saw the light of day.
Kenley and his fellow members of the Governor’s Public Health Commission will be making a proposal to state lawmakers as they fashion the coming 2-year budget for the state. Under this plan, state government would provide 80% of public health funding if individual counties opt-in to the program.
Legislative leaders are not fully behind the Commission’s ideas but have not opposed the proposal yet, and many details of the plan are not publicly known at this time. But Kenley, according to Blanchard’s reporting, has been quietly meeting with officials from around the state in an effort to round up support for the Commission’s ideas.
Blanchard ends his piece with how poor health among Hoosiers has a price tag. In other words, a lack of public health spending has costs everyone must pay as a result.
When Mayor Fadness created the Fishers Health Department, he did so because he maintained the health of his residents was at risk without access to COVID testing. He was able to do that, and the city’s Health Department is still around and still doing the work of public health.
A once-powerful state senator is now trying to sell a plan to provide better public health in Indiana through a system allowing local governments to opt into a new plan, if state lawmakers choose. The answer will come when the legislative session next year approves the state’s 2-year spending plan.
Peter Blanchard’s story in the IBJ is available at this link, but you may need to be a subscriber to access it. Again, I encourage everyone to subscribe to your local media.
Thanksgiving is one of the special holidays celebrated during the year. It is a time to assess how lucky you are. I know I feel lucky, very lucky.
As I have written about before, the past two years have been difficult for me. I had two serious health issues arise, and at my age, either one could have killed me.
That has given me a perspective. Every day is a gift. Although my age slows me down some, I know that there is a reason I am still on this earth. As a husband, son, brother, father and grandfather (just to name a few) I treasure all my family and other relationships every single day.
The news blog continues and the podcasts continue into 2023. I do expect the coming year to be quite newsworthy and as long as I keep my health, there is every intention to continue the blog and podcasts.
My volunteer work is a way of giving back to a community that provided my twin daughters with a first-class education and a wonderful community in which to grow up. They are both college grads, married and have grown into outstanding young women.
Every Thanksgiving I write about those of you choosing to read my blog. I remain amazed at the number of people reading this local online news source. After all, I am a one-man band. I have no editor other than myself (yes, there are errors, I spot them and correct them as soon as I can).
When starting this blog in 2012, my wife seemed to be saying, OK, go ahead and do this, but she acted as if it would last a few months, and I would give it up. That never happened.
That’s because of you, all of you choosing to read this blog. I understand there is a hunger for local news in Fishers and I have tried for 11 years to produce just that, the best way one persona alone can.
Every now and then, I will end a blog post with “thanks for reading.” I do mean that now. It is because of you reading, in the numbers you are reading, that keeps me going.
So, happy Thanksgiving. Spend time with friends and family. Reflect on what you are thankful for…as someone that has experienced many low points in my life, even at those lowest points, I had much to be thankful for.
Let me close this blog post with the sign-off I’ve used on my podcasts since COVID hit us hard – be safe, and be kind!
The Fishers road construction report is being issued early this week, since city departments will be closed both Thanksgiving Day and the Friday afterward.
But there are a couple of items of interests, and once again reminding everyone about road closures Thanksgiving Day for the two 5K events.
Here is the listing, as provided by the City of Fishers:
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PROJECTS NORTH OF 116TH STREET
MUNICIPAL DRIVE A small section of Municipal Drive is currently closed for utility relocation as part of the City Hall demolition project and Arts & Municipal Complex construction project and is anticipated to reopen on Friday, December 9. View closure map here.
PROJECTS SOUTH OF 116TH STREET
96TH STREET Beginning on Monday, November 28, lane restrictions will be in place between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. on the outside lane of westbound 96th Street between Cumberland Road and Sargent Road thru Wednesday, November 30 for sanitary work.
THANKSGIVING DAY 5K’S
FISHERS YMCA WISHBONE 5K Road closures will be in place on Thursday, November 24 between 8 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. for the Fishers YMCA Wishbone 5K. Closures will begin at the Fishers YMCA on 126th Street, west to Saksons Blvd., around Ellipse Pkwy. to Farley Drive, to Turkel Drive, east on Sunblest Blvd., south on Lantern Road to the Nickel Plate Trail. Participants will continue north on the NPT until 126th Street. View route and other race details here.
GOBBLERS JOG 5K Road closures will be in place on Thursday, November 24 between 8 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. for the Gobblers Jog 5K. Closures will begin at Witten Park on 134th Street in Saxony Village, east to Olio Road, south to 126th Street, west to Pennington Road, north to 131st Street, east to Saxony Blvd., then west on 131st Street to Pennington Road/Erden Drive. Participants will continue to Witten Park. View route here.
The Fishers Arts Council continues its monthly displays in December, featuring artists the organization describes a new to the city and “up and coming.”
Below is a news release from the Arts Council with all the details:
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During the month of December Fishers Arts Council shines a spotlight on 10 Hamilton County artists who are “Up and Coming” and “New to Fishers”. Their artwork will be on display in the Gallery at the Collaboration Hub at Hamilton County Community Foundation (11810 Technology Drive, Fishers) from December 5-30 and can be viewed Monday-Friday from 9am-5pm, with a few exceptions for holiday closures. A special “Meet the Artists” panel will be offered during the Second Friday reception on Friday, December 9, at 6:45pm – and guests are welcome to drop in anytime from 6-8pm for the family friendly event.
Josh Brinson defines himself as a muralist and graphic designer. Josh says, ” In middle school (circa 2005) I discovered graffiti and street art. The idea that these huge pieces were on display in public and for all to see intrigued me. Plus the vibrant colors, dimensional structures and wild characters involved in the pieces gave life to what were once only stark barriers within a cityscape.” At that point, Brinson says he was committed to turning his passion into a full-time career. In the future, he hopes to focus on putting his art on apparel and merchandise, and he also hopes to create original figurines/designer toys.
Artist Larry Evans says he first became interested in art, “When I was a kid and saw my first Van Gogh painting and learned his background. I have always loved art and drawing, but that day art kind of became cool in a super weird way, I guess. Van Gogh is still my favorite artist today.” Larry says his next goal as an artist is to do a large painting and mess around with gold foil somehow within that painting. Larry maintains that one of his greatest disappointments is losing first prize in an art contest in second grade because the school principal said that the drawing was too good to have been done by a second grader. He says that principal’s bad decision cost Larry to lose the $250 prize money.
Jacob Hernandez’ approach to the concept of art and artist is unique. “I am a firm believer that everyone is an artist in his or her own way, and I am a lover of all forms of art, whether that be traditional drawing/painting, photography, sculpture, architecture, design, literature, film, music, theater, and so on. Being an artist is a wonderful thing, and I encourage everyone to make use of their own inner artist!” Visitors to the Emerging Artists exhibit will be able to experience how Jacob has made use of his own “inner artist.”
Julia Holland is a current Art + Design student at Butler University. “I have been passionate about art my entire life,” she says, and has goals to pursue a life and career within the arts. While abstract art isn’t her favorite, her portrait work truly sings.
Painter Barbara Howrey’s story is one that is probably familiar to a lot of people: “I started my art journey by painting watercolors in 1992. I put my son, who was two years old at the time, into a Mom’s Day Out program at a local church, and I signed up for watercolor classes at a framing shop in Brownsburg, IN. I was only able to attend classes for a year because life kind of got in the way. I began painting again in 2019, and in 2021, I discovered fluid art and decided I really liked it and began practicing that medium.” What is “fluid art”? Visitors to the exhibit will have to meet Barbara and see her work to find out.
Artist Deb Lavengood is a woman of many talents. She cooks and enters cooking competitions–and wins–and she paints with acrylics and watercolors. Her current passion is photography, and she plans to put that talent to use this winter. Deb says, ” My husband and I are going on a cruise to a number of different Caribbean islands this winter, and I want to capture the beauty of the aqua Caribbean water and tranquil beaches to bring joy to myself and others during the dark winter months.”
Oil painter Mike Martin early on fell in love with the inherent characteristics of oil paints. Mike says that his greatest success as an artist happened when he learned not to be his own worst critic. He realized that every painting goes through an “ugly duckling” period until it starts to flow, and it is important to focus on what “works” in the painting and improve on those elements.
Photography is Justin Sicking‘s passion. He says that he really enjoys learning new things and researching different techniques as they relate to “all different categories and niches of Photography. I love getting to see how small changes affect the outcome of an image, and I embrace the opportunity to get better and better results with every shoot.”
Riley Sims is currently a student at Ball State University, and says, “My greatest success as an artist has to be actually being an artist. I think that is the hardest part. Changing my major from art education to just studio art is my greatest success as an artist because it was the first step to fulfilling my dream.” After Riley graduates in the spring, she would love to attend an art residency program at one of the national parks and continue to pursue her artistic interests and techniques. Riley served as the first FAC intern this past summer, helping our team on a variety of projects.
Angee Walberry‘s experience in creating art began when she was home on disability leave and “sheer boredom led me to dabble in paint.” She was happy that so many people liked the results of her “dabbling” that she kept on drawing and painting. Angee is working on a new series with her “weird squiggly people.” Her personal goal is to travel everywhere to capture people at play, at rest, and at work. She hopes that an art residency at Fire Island, New York, or in Key West, Florida, is in her future.
Fishers Arts Council hopes that you will join us in attending the Second Friday reception of “Art of the Emerging Artist” on December 9, and meet these wonderful, creative people and hear their stories. Live music will be performed by Emily Ann Thompson, refreshments and a cash bar will be provided as well as a comfortable community space for connecting with artists and other art-lovers. Most artwork will be available for sale – and this is a great opportunity to support a local artist and get something one-of-a-kind for the holidays. All are welcome and we look forward to seeing you in the Gallery.
With the holiday season upon us, the Fishers Police Department has released a list of tips aimed at keeping your holiday season a festive one .
“We encourage residents and visitors to be careful, prepared, and aware of their surroundings,” say police officials. “If you see something that does not look or feel right please call 911 immediately.”
Below is the full list of tips from Fishers Police:
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Driving
Always wear your seatbelt.
Never drink and drive.
Put away cell phones or other devices that could cause a distraction
Do not exceed the speed limit.
Be courteous and patient with other drivers.
Allow aggressive drivers to pass.
Do not engage in verbal altercations. Calling out another driver’s bad behavior could lead to criminal physical violence.
Call 911 to report impaired or dangerous driving
If driving alone, notify a friend or family member of your route and approximate time of arrival.
If you must use an ATM, choose one that is located near a police station, mall, or well-lighted location. Withdraw only the amount of cash you need.
Protect your PIN by shielding the ATM keypad from anyone who is standing near you.
Do not throw your ATM receipt away at the ATM location.
Shopping
Shop during daylight hours whenever possible. If you must shop at night, go with a friend and park in a well-lighted area.
Park as close as you can to your destination and take notice of where you parked.
Dress casually and comfortably.
Even though you are rushed and thinking about a thousand things, stay alert to your surroundings.
Avoid carrying large amounts of cash.
Keep cash in your front pocket.
Notify the credit card issuer immediately if your credit card is lost, stolen or misused.
Keep a record of all your credit card numbers in a safe place at home.
Be extra careful if you do carry a wallet or purse. They are the prime targets of criminals in crowded shopping areas and public transportation locations.
Avoid overloading yourself with packages. It is important to have clear visibility and freedom of motion to avoid mishaps.
Do not leave packages or valuables on the seat of your car. This creates a temptation for thieves. If you must leave something in the car, lock it in the trunk or put it out of sight.
When approaching and leaving your vehicle be aware of your surroundings.
Do not approach your car alone if there are suspicious people in the area.
If you are concerned about parking lot safety, ask mall or store security for an escort before leaving your shopping location.
Children
Teach children to always stay close to you and to inform you if a stranger is bothering them.
Never allow children to make unaccompanied trips to the bathroom.
Children should never be allowed to go to the car alone and they should never be left alone in the car.
Teach children their full name, address, and telephone number.
At Home
Do the 9PM Routine. Lock it, Hide it, Keep it.
Always double check doors and windows, ensuring they are locked, when you leave the house, even for a few minutes.
When leaving home for an extended time, have a neighbor or family member watch your house and pick up your mail and return garbage bins.
Indoor and outdoor lights should be on an automatic timer.
Leave a radio or television on so the house looks and sounds occupied.
Contact the Fishers Police at (317) 595-3300 and/or fill out a Vacation Watch Form to notify us of your vacant home.
Large displays of holiday gifts should not be visible through the windows and doors of your home.
Residents should NEVER open the door to a stranger.
Residents should announce that they are in the house and call 911 immediately.
Be aware that criminals sometimes pose as couriers delivering gifts.
It is not uncommon for criminals to take advantage of the generosity of people during the holiday season by soliciting donations door-to-door for charitable causes when no charity is involved.
Donate to a recognized charitable organization.
Immediately call 911 to report suspicious activity