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City of Bloomington, Indiana

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closed #165100

Potholes, Other Street Repair

1210 S Lincoln ST

Case Date:
7/10/2018

Between houses 1210 and 1212 on South Lincoln Street, there is a section of pavement that has buckled and is allowing runoff to wash out the soil under the road and sidewalk. The size is approximately 16" X 36". It is located directly off of the curb, and near the driveway for 1212 South Lincoln St.

closed #153345

Yard Waste

1209 S Washington ST

Case Date:
6/7/2016

must have stickers

closed #125556

Recycling

1209 S Walnut ST

Case Date:
4/4/2012

Miss out picked up by Scott Holland.

closed #132596

Excessive Growth

1209 S Walnut ST

Case Date:
7/2/2013

closed #169989

Trash

1209 S Walnut ST

Case Date:
8/22/2019

Trash bags in alley behind property, attracting rodents

closed #150908

Parking on Unimproved Surface

1209 S Park AVE

Case Date:
3/3/2016

Vehicle parked in rear yard behind garage. Noted from Woodlawn at neighbors request.

closed #181636

Traffic Suggestions

1209 S Palmer AVE

Case Date:
9/26/2022

I have lived on this street (S Palmer Avenue between Hillside and Grimes) for going on nine years now, and myself and my neighbors are concerned with the speed many non-residential drivers use on this span of Palmer. The majority of drivers maintain a speed far too fast down our street. This is especially troubling because half of our street has not sidewalks and many Bryan Park residents use the street as a walking path. I would like to request either a speed-monitoring study or the installation of traffic-slowing measures on this stretch of Palmer.

closed #128744

Trash

1209 S Lincoln ST

Case Date:
9/17/2012

closed #148655

Excessive Growth

1208 S Woodlawn AVE

Case Date:
9/24/2015

closed #181322

Excessive Growth

1208 S Woodlawn AVE

Case Date:
9/1/2022

The property of 1208 S Woodlawn Ave contains Japanese Knotweed. Japanese Knotweed is a city-listed nuisance weed, and in the case of this property the growth is well over 8 inches (more like 5-10 feet) and is visibly spreading into adjacent properties to the west and north by rhizome. The Japanese Knotweed is also visibly growing into that house's siding and foundation. This is likely a rental house situation where the landlord is neglecting the landscaping.