closed #206411
Animal Control & Neglected Pets
1108 S Rogers ST
- Case Date:
- 10/21/2025
Flattened dead skunk in the gutter in front of 1108 S Rogers St
Flattened dead skunk in the gutter in front of 1108 S Rogers St
Dead Squirrel in road
Dead Squirrel in road
There is a dead possum in the road in front of our house at 1108 S. Rogers St.
GigaBit Now sign in the ROW
Aggressive deer charging human beings
20x20 site of digging, with tarps in place and visible cones. Neighbors say some crew started this last week, then abandoned it. I certainly did not give anyone permission to enter my property, and if this is a right of way, it does not show on the plat. I want it remediated, repaired, and reimbursement for the costs of this destruction of private property. I'll contact the city attorney tomorrow.
Detached water main cover, very dangerous
Last night I tried for an hour to upload the required documents for a residential parking permit for my son’s car. The system rejects both pdfs and jpegs repeatedly. Today, I came to city hall to get the permit in person, and I was redirected to parking services on south walnut. When I arrived — at 12:45p — only one person appeared to be in the office, and she was unable to process the request and give me a residential parking permit. She indicated that the “person who could handle it,” was at lunch and would return at 1:30p. Like many, I presume, I used my own lunch hour to make an in-person visit to obtain a required residential parking permit. Staffing choices and, essentially, an office closure during a Bloomington resident’s traditional lunch hour seems inefficient and ineffective. I am standing in the parking office awaiting the return of, seemingly, the one person who can process my permit request.
Last night I tried for an hour to upload the required documents for a residential parking permit for my son’s car. The system rejects both pdfs and jpegs repeatedly. Today, I came to city hall to get the permit in person, and I was redirected to parking services on south walnut. When I arrived — at 12:45p — only one person appeared to be in the office, and she was unable to process the request and give me a residential parking permit. She indicated that the “person who could handle it,” was at lunch and would return at 1:30p. Like many, I presume, I used my own lunch hour to make an in-person visit to obtain a required residential parking permit. Staffing choices and, essentially, an office closure during a Bloomington resident’s traditional lunch hour seems inefficient and ineffective. I am standing in the parking office awaiting the return of, seemingly, the one person who can process my permit request.