uReport

City of Bloomington, Indiana

open #207917

Other:

Other: What appears to be a sump pump discharge pipe at 801 W Howe Street is sending a significant amount of liquid water into the public right-of-way during freezing conditions. Water is being dumped onto the sidewalk on S Maple Street, between W 2nd and W Howe. This is creating a driving hazard and safety issue at the intersection of W Howe and S Maple, as the liquid water is running out into the intersection, pooling, and freezing into a sheet of ice. What doesn't freeze at this intersection is travelling down Howe to the entrance for the Building Trade Park parking lot, where it is also freezing into a sheet of ice.

Assigned to
Jeremy Bettis

History

1/28/2026 08:16:09 Cheyenne Bowlen assigned this case to Jeremy Bettis

Jeremy, We are sending someone to salt the street, but the homeowner will need to salt the sidewalk.

Sent notification to Jeremy Bettis
https://bloomington.in.gov/crm/tickets/view?ticket_id=207917 Cheyenne Bowlen assigned this case to Jeremy Bettis You can use the link to follow progress on this case. Jeremy, We are sending someone to salt the street, but the homeowner will need to salt the sidewalk.

1/28/2026 08:11:25 Anonymous assigned this case to Cheyenne Bowlen

Sent notification to Cheyenne Bowlen
https://bloomington.in.gov/crm/tickets/view?ticket_id=207917 Anonymous assigned this case to Cheyenne Bowlen You can use the link to follow progress on this case.

1/28/2026 08:11:25 Opened by Anonymous

801 W Howe ST

CityBloomington
StateIN
Zip47403
Latitude39.162246704102
Longitude-86.54239654541
Neighborhood AssociationProspect Hill
TownshipPerry

Other cases for this location

StatusCase DateCategory
closed8/20/2025Excessive Growth
closed3/1/2023Parking Permits
closed7/26/2016Yard Waste
closed4/5/2016Yard Waste
closed9/10/2014Yard Waste
closed8/26/2014Yard Waste
closed8/12/2014Yard Waste
closed7/29/2014Yard Waste
closed4/8/2014Recycling
closed7/16/2013Yard Waste
closed3/14/2006Trash
closed1/17/2006Trash
closed5/14/1997Unsafe Buildings
closed6/21/1995Excessive Growth