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City of Bloomington, Indiana

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closed #193157

Accessibility Problem

520 S Walnut Street

Case Date:
8/27/2024

- US Post Office; concrete barrier in parking lot, obstructed patron from mailing items

closed #187253

Inaccessible Parking

303 W Dodds St, Bloomington, IN 47403, USA

Case Date:
2/9/2024

Bloomington Center for Connection has no accessible parking in their FlexePark lot of 12 spaces on Morton, parallel to the B-Line trail.

closed #200076

Accessibility Problem

401 N Morton ST

Case Date:
1/9/2025

closed #202286

Accessibility Problem

102 1/2 N Grant ST

Case Date:
4/26/2025

Public entrance to this store is inaccessible

closed #202428

Accessibility Problem

West Second Street, just east of Euclid, north side of street

Case Date:
5/1/2025

Construction equipment is parked on the sidewalk. The city would not let businesses park this equipment on the street, blocking access for cars. Why do you allow them to block access for pedestrians? Thank you.

closed #188306

Sidewalk & Curb Complaints

408 E Kirkwood Ave, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA

Case Date:
5/7/2024

This is at Kilroys. They have a line not to cross. They crossed the line again. Please fine them

closed #202413

Inaccessible Parking

600 W 6th ST

Case Date:
5/1/2025

Flexepark lot here has no accessible parking

closed #202948

Accessibility Problem

3rd and College, north side of overpass

Case Date:
5/26/2025

Please finish repairing the north side of the overpass that goes from College to the trail along 3rd. It’s been closed for weeks and I’ve never seen a sign of work going on. The south side of this overpass has steps, so people with mobility issues need to use the north side. Thank you.

open #188206

Sidewalk & Curb Complaints

501 E Kirkwood AVE

Case Date:
4/30/2024

They can’t stay within the lines. Fine then already.

open #202016

Website & Web Services Feedback

402 S Dunn ST

Case Date:
4/10/2025

Currently, the city only has one method for filing noise complaints, which is to call the number listed on the city's website. Having only one reporting method is extremely ineffective, and limiting the reporting method to only verbal communication creates a barrier for accessibility. There are individuals who cannot communicate over the phone - like me. Illness stole my voice years ago, but my hearing was not impacted - I still hear the noise. I just can't report it. Not sure what an adequate fix would be, as it would have to be something that is regularly monitored. (Address provided is rough estimate of area where heavy bass plays frequently, it could be one of these houses or an apartment building - I needed to put a location on the map, so I included that one.)