closed #186894
Other
205 N Walnut ST
- Case Date:
- 1/25/2024
Homeless living in doorway of the tempo bar
Homeless living in doorway of the tempo bar
Homeless living in ravine behind One World commisary
Homeless living under the railroad bridge trash everywhere your website wont allow me to add a photo
Homeless living in front of the vacant store front on the east side of the square
Homeless sleeping on the sidewalk
Homeless sleeping on bench.
Thanks for fixing what I reported uReport Case #181345 Thanks fixing this. I was walking with friends this morning (9/13l and one pointed to straw-coveres filled (and seeded, I assume) area and asked when did that get fixed!
A question for information that can't find on the City website. Probably my lack of skill searching. Who are the current CAPS commissioners? And, specifically, when was Jason Michálek appointed? Thanks in advance.
In front of my house is this wooden structure holding a bunch of mailboxes. The structure is leaning over and the mailboxes aren't in the best condition. Who is responsible for this structure of assorted mailboxes? Can it either be fixed or even better, can the mailboxes go in front of the houses that they belong to and not mine?
In response to uReport case# 178546, thank you for the information as well as the contact information for IU in the case of future questions. It is good to learn that IU has made some solid changes in the ten years since the issue was thrust onto them by student activists. Reducing the use of coal-powered electricity to less than 15% and intermittent use is positive, but I think that that number should really be zero in this year of 2022. I hope that they are still encouraged by the city to completely eliminate coal and supplement their power with sustainable sources such as solar. There has been little action to address the climate crisis by the Indiana General Assembly, and Indiana has a very poor reputation on air quality as one of the worst states in the U.S. for carbon pollution. The latest United Nations climate report states that the climate crisis has reached code red for humanity. Therefore, in 2022 it is hard to swallow that there is still a coal burning power plant in the middle of a dense city on the grounds of an institution of higher education surrounded by throngs of young people with brains that are still developing. We should not be okay with anything other than zero percent. I am not sure what else the railroad line in Bloomington is used for but I know it carries coal. Perhaps, if that need went away and the rail line ever became unused, then it could be converted into a trail that all of the community could use for non-fossil fuel burning purposes. The City of Chicago did that about ten years ago with a dormant elevated rail line and it was transformative for those neighborhoods. Lastly, I leave you all with a line from the Great Law of the Haudenosaunee, the founding document of the Iroquois Confederacy, the oldest living participatory democracy on Earth. "In every deliberation, we must consider the impact of our decisions on the next seven generations." I do not seek a reply. Thank you for your time.