- Case Date:
- 12/11/2020
A landscape crew repairing the lawn area that was disturbed from an accident last week noticed a leak that was caused by the vehicle. The vehicle apparently had driven over the meter pit. The pit was filled with water, and the City of Bloomington meter was leaking. Nature’s Way staff was able to turn the water connection to that meter off. They recommended we contact COB so that they can address installing a new meter connection, or what repair is deemed necessary.
- Case Date:
- 12/15/2020
Tree limbs and overgrowth are growing into the public utility lines, along High Street.
The sidewalk is unsafe, has not been cleaned, is covered in debris, yard waste, and mud.
The excessive water drainage from the house, has caused a pothole in the public street (High Street), with a blacktop patch, that is unsafe, and collects water and debris. Not even level with the roadway.
- Case Date:
- 7/25/2023
Cbu water manhole cover is off/open in front of this address
- Case Date:
- 2/3/2024
We had to move due to our rental, not having heat or running water. The hot water heater went out, as well as the heater. Landlord refused to fix. The landlord was notified, and the response was for us to fix it.
Illegal Discharge (Storm Sewers)
1020 S Woodlawn AVE
- Case Date:
- 6/28/2022
On May 4th, 2022 I was taking a walk through the park when I noticed a chemical-type smell lingering near the stream that flows east to west through the middle of the park. When I went to investigate the source of the smell, I was alarmed by an opaque milky white substance contaminating the flowing stream. It also seemed to be the source of the smell. I followed the contamination upstream and traced it to a white PVC pipe that appears to originate from the Bryan Park pool facility. There was also particulate settling in the water where the pipe drains into the stream.
Immediately after that I walked to the pool facility and confirmed with two city workers that the pool does indeed drain directly into the park's stream. They also told me that they were directed to power-wash the pool area and the resulting material was discharging directly into the stream via the PVC drainage pipe. Further, other city workers have confirmed with me that the pool water itself gets drained into the stream annually. I am not sure if this is legal - and if it is legal, it is certainly not environmentally sound. The material that is draining into the stream is very likely environmentally harmful.
Illegal Discharge (Storm Sewers)
986 S Copper Beech WAY
- Case Date:
- 5/5/2023
Black water or gray water is bubbling up from the pavement right above Basswood Drive at the above address, it's pouring into the stormwater drain
Illegal Discharge (Storm Sewers)
501 S Mitchell ST
- Case Date:
- 5/14/2023
Water is slowly but continuosly leaking from the house at 501 South Mitchell across the Eastside neighborhood pocket park into the storm water runoff ditch.
The leak location is close to the house's sewer cleanout and so possibly a sewage leak.
Fire Hazards
623 W Smith AVE
- Case Date:
- 3/19/2022
Please view cameras and check the water lines in Prospect Hill. Today Travis Knight, Tony McDowell, Ernie Wright, Shane Terrell and Ryan Corbin robbed my house and stole my mail and possibly poured gasoline in the outside water lines and hook up
Excessive Growth
2304 S Ford AVE
- Case Date:
- 10/14/2021
Home owner has excessive growth in back yard. Home owner also has two untreated, unfiltered, and un-serviced pits in the back yard that fill with rain water and are left standing. Referred to as "ponds". This has caused an increase in critters and bugs in the area. I would like this request to remain anonymous please...
Drainage or Runoff
1202 E Elliston DR
- Case Date:
- 4/24/2020
I live at 1202 E. Elliston Drive (green house pictured). Elliston Dr, at the northwest corner of our lot, pools with a large volume of storm water after even a little rainfall, and it does not drain we have to wait for it to evaporate. I know it's probably an undertaking but is there any way the city can fix this? Overall the corner is a high elevation but there's a shallow pool there as you can see, and no storm drain. Could a storm line be ran down to another location so it can drain away and stop causing problems with the curb basically eroding away?