Parks & Rec Programs
401 N Morton ST
- Case Date:
- 10/3/2023
The fees for food vendors are too high and are driving vendors away from the market. That also means that the market is less interesting to patrons. The local food vendors are important to those who come. Please lower these fees.
- Case Date:
- 9/26/2023
I would like to advocate an end to the % fee system for Food & Beverage Artisans. We need to support local food producers who are already competing with by stores such as Kroger etc. Let's spend our $ on locally grown food & take away another challenge that they are facing in trying to seel their products locally.
- Case Date:
- 9/14/2023
Please adjust the rates at the market for artisan vendors, bringing the numbers into conformity with other markets in the Midwest.
Parks & Rec Programs
401 N Morton ST
- Case Date:
- 9/12/2023
Pls charge food vendors the same as produce booths. I want to see them back to what once was our thriving Saturday market. Thanks!
- Case Date:
- 9/8/2023
Look at the policies that have driven Btown from a town of interest to a handful of publicly interesting locations with decades of presence.
Food vendors would better benefit the community through collaboration with sustainable government policies;
rather than finding it beneficial to connect their resources to affordable public commercially available resources to afford their work.
- Case Date:
- 8/17/2023
At the Farmer's Market, on Saturday, 12 August, I was surprised to see our "security" not only dressed as if he was about to go into battle, which makes me feel LESS secure, but also sitting around, not looking up from his phone screen. It was actually a vendor who first noted and grabbed a picture of this security guard. Is he mandated to come dressed for battle and shouldn't he be a presence in the market, keeping an eye on the market itself?
Parks & Rec Programs
100 W 2nd St, Bloomington, IN 47403, USA
- Case Date:
- 8/15/2023
why have the wantabe homeless still able to have tents and live trash and destroy the park and anyone else's desire to go there
Parks & Rec Programs
1020 W 9th St, Bloomington, IN 47404, USA
- Case Date:
- 6/2/2023
There is a new sign in the parking lot at the Butler Community Garden on a pile of rotted wood chips that has been aging for a couple of years. The sign warns that the material is infested with invasive jumping worms. If that's the case, shouldn't this be removed and disposed of? If the sign is vandalized or destroyed and the material is used, what is the danger to the community garden plots?
- Case Date:
- 5/25/2023
your website is horrible
Parks & Rec Programs
401 N Morton ST
- Case Date:
- 5/20/2023
We hope these comments will fall on fertile ground resolving a vacant feeling at the Farmer's Market. For many years, Medicare for All Indiana Bloomington, formerly known as Hoosiers for a Commonsense Health Plan, has had a booth in Information Alley, paying ahead for the whole season. Our booth has been well attended by market patrons by having many deep and important conversations about healthcare with people who live in the Bloomington area, other regions around Indiana, the US, and indeed, international students and visitors. COVID restricted our being at the market. Last year, the days the market was open for Information Alley, it frequently rained, so we cancelled several times. Today was our first day back for 2023. Information Alley felt like a ghost town. No food vendors and only two other booths, the Dems and the ballet students. What was missing was the spirit of a bustling market with people buying bread, coffee, tea, pastries, savory eggs and tamales. When we asked about the empty food area, we were told that it's the vendor fees keeping vendors out. We've been hearing this for many years. The popularity of the food vendors goes hand in hand with the market growers. Market growers we spoke with this morning expressed the same attitude. Each group, the food vendors and market growers, support the other in bringing people to the market. If in fact, it's the fee, then we believe that the decision is penny wise and pound foolish from what we witnessed today. The market is dull without the bustling food vendor area. The identity of Bloomington having a thriving farmers market is an asset to the entire community. We're curious just how much money is involved with fees for the food vendors. Are they being asked to subsidize the market without setting up in the heart of the market with covered space? How much do the total fees collected from food vendors add to the Parks and Recreation budget? And is the fee worth the alienation of food vendors in the long run? We look forward to hearing your response.
Medicare for All Indiana - Bloomington
Karen Green Stone
Cathy Rountree
Kris Campbell
Rob Stone, MD