closed #167331
Recycling
1002 E Allendale DR
- Case Date:
- 2/7/2019
Recycling and Trash bin constantly thrown into driveway after emptied.
Recycling and Trash bin constantly thrown into driveway after emptied.
My recycling wasn't picked up today. No note or anything so must have just been missed. North side of Maxwell at Stull Ave.
Good Morning. Our recycling container was not fully emptied this morning. Would you please have the recycling truck come back by our home to fully empty our containers? Also, when doing a Google search, we realized that our former city uReports can be seen online. We would appreciate if you could please remove this information and keep our uReports private between us and the city. Here is where we found them: https://bloomington.in.gov/crm/tickets?category_id=36;client_id=3;contactMethod_id=11;department_id=17 Thank you
My recycling bin disappeared last week between when I put it out on the curb Sunday night and when I got home Monday afternoon. My trash bin is still here. I had hoped that a neighbor had taken it accidentally and would return it, but it has not shown up yet and I’m afraid it was stolen.
4ft. by 3ft. pothole; standing water; breeding ground as well as traffic hazard
Potholes -- intersection of S Pickwick Place & Winfield Road, Bloomington, IN 47401
Sam Zheng reported this pothole in front of 2303 E. Wimbleton Ln a few months ago and the patch job was totally inadequate. Now there are tons of chunks of asphalt that washed from this hole down the street and are now scattered all across the road in front of 2217 E. Wimbleton Ln. It would be nice to get this hole fixed properly and all the debris downstream cleaned up.
Lots of potholes throughout Hyde Park on Winston St, Olcott Blvd, Brigs Bend, etc.
Flooding on 6/15/19 caused part of the road to wash away and left debris.
3600 block of Brownridge Rd on north side: Due to flooding, the stream bed is encroaching on the road surface so that now there's a 3-ft. drop eroded up to the black-top. It's beginning to undermine the road surface. Some local erosion control for about a 10-foot stretch should arrest the problem for the foreseeable future, I'd think. Of course, we could wait until the road gets undercut, and that'd be quite a bit more complicated, I think.