All posts by Kevin Kelley

No Gen Con in Indy This Year

There will be no tabletop gaming convention in Indianapolis this summer.

The organizers of Gen Con have announced that the annual convention, scheduled for July 30 – Aug. 2, has been canceled due to Coronavirus concerns.

“The safety and health of our attendees, exhibitors, and staff are of the utmost importance to us, and we cannot in good conscience host a gathering of thousands while doing so could threaten the health of so many. The only responsible choice is to cancel the convention this year,” organizers said in a statement.

In place of the event, the convention’s organizers have announced plans for Gen Con Online, a free virtual convention. Additional details about Gen Con Online will be shared soon.

Badge holders for the 2020 event can visit the Gen Con website, www.gencon.com, for more information.

Gen Con will return to the Indiana Convention Center Aug. 5-8, 2021.

Bartholomew County 4-H Fair Cancelled

The Bartholomew County 4-H Fair has been cancelled for 2020 due to the Covid-19 Pandemic. The fair board announced the fair , scheduled for July 10th-18th will not be held in person. The fair board felt that it would “be impossible to comply with the requirements and ensure the safety of those in attendance”. The plan is to allow 4-H(ers) to show their projects virtually. More information on that will be forthcoming.

 

Summer Reading Program to Start Soon

Law enforcement officers from the Columbus Police Department and Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Office have teamed up with  the (Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative) and Viewpoint Books to assist with a summer reading program.  Starting on Wednesday, May 20th, students and their families who have received books from JDAI will be able to get online and read along with law enforcement officers who were video recorded reading select chapters from the books. A link to the videos will be shared every Wednesday morning on CPD and BCSO social media pages.  So far, JDAI and Viewpoint Books have distributed over 70 sets of books from the Trouble at Table 5 book series to families in the community.

 

Porter Beach to Open for Memorial Day Weekend

The Indiana Dunes National Park said it will be reopening its section of Porter Beach for Memorial Day weekend.

The park will be reopening the beach, parking lots and restrooms.

The town of Porter said it’s town council agreed to keep the community’s beach parking lot closed.

Bruce Rowe, supervisory park ranger and public information officer told the Northwest Indiana Times that an information phone line is being put in place to guide visitors to available beach parking.

National Park Service and town authorities will be monitoring the beach for overcrowding and will close it if they need to protect public health, said Rowe.

He recommends visitors use West Beach or the state park.

Bloomington Man Arrested for Stabbing

A Bloomington man has been arrested for the stabbing death of his girlfriend.

The Bloomington Police Department got a call from a man on Saturday, saying his 50-year-old mother had been missing. The last time he saw her was May 6th, when she left to go see her boyfriend, John Bryant.

On Monday, officers went to Bryant’s apartment after they got a tip that the woman’s vehicle was located nearby. When police showed up, they noticed something on the living room floor covered with blankets. When they removed the blankets, they discovered a female body with multiple stab wounds on her back.

Bryant was arrested, and taken to the Monroe County Jail. He’s charged with murder.

Notre Dame Welcoming Students Back in Fall

The University of Notre Dame will bring students back to campus for the 2020-21 fall semester, but with plenty of coronavirus safety guidelines in place.

They will return August 10, which is two weeks earlier than originally scheduled. There will be no fall break and the semester will end before Thanksgiving.

“By far the most complex challenge before us is the return of our students to campus for the resumption of classes in the fall semester,” the University’s President Rev. John Jenkins wrote in letters to the campus community. “Bringing our students back is in effect assembling a small city of people from many parts of the nation and the world, who may bring with them pathogens to which they have been exposed. We recognize the challenge, but we believe it is one we can meet.”

Jenkins says the plan will include comprehensive coronavirus testing, contact tracing, quarantine and isolation protocols, social distancing and mask requirements, along with enhanced cleaning of all campus spaces. The protocols will continue throughout the semester as long as necessary.

“As we adapt to the new normal brought on by the coronavirus, we will do everything we can to provide you with a safe learning, research and working environment,” Jenkins wrote.

Faculty have been asked to prepare to offer courses both in person and through remote instruction.

The University’s Research Task Force will develop a plan for the safe and gradual re-opening of labs, studios, and libraries. Jenkins said in addition to that task force, two other groups of administrators, faculty, and staff are working on all aspects of the reopening of the campus.

-The Academic Continuity Working Group has made recommendations about the academic calendar, the modes of delivering instruction, and ensuring flexibility should circumstances change

-The Medical Health/Health/Operations Working Group is attending to the various steps needed to keep the campus health and safe for everyone.

“These groups have developed plans and are giving me the information I need to make decisions,” Jenkins wrote. “In addition, we have met with a Faculty Advisory Committee. I have discussed with this committee key recommendations of the working groups and shared with them my own thinking.”

Jenkins says Notre Dame International is developing criteria for deciding whether to proceed with study abroad programs in the fall. A decision on that is supposed to come in June.

Indiana Teacher of the Year

The Indiana Department of Education announced Tuesday that all Indiana teachers have been named the 2021 Teacher of the Year.

“The COVID-19 pandemic brought new complexities and challenges to schools with no advance warning,” said State Superintendent Dr. Jennifer McCormick. “Teachers across our state have displayed a level of flexibility and commitment.”

Normally, one Hoosier teacher wins the award from the IDOE. The Department has been handing out the annual award for more than 60 years.

Indiana BMV Branches to Close for Memorial Day Weekend

All Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles branches will be closed Saturday through Monday in observance of the Memorial Day holiday.

Branch appointments will resume Tuesday.

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic Customers are required to have an appointment before visitng a branch.

The appointment scheduler along with more information can be found on the BMV website at in dot gov.

Interstate Paving Tonight

Tonight, northbound traffic will be shifted to the southbound side of I-65 from MM 53.6 to MM 56. Southbound traffic will remain in its current configuration on the southbound side.

With this switch complete, southbound and northbound traffic will travel on the southbound side from MM 50 to MM 56. Access to SR 11 from I-65 northbound will be maintained in this configuration, but will be shifted to fully construct the new northbound pavement.

 

Guidelines Set for Re-Opening Indiana Casinos

The Indiana Gaming Commission has issued five pages of guidelines for casinos on how to protect workers and gamblers from coronavirus. Casinos will have capacity limits based on the number of gaming positions, capped at no more than half their normal capacity. They’ll have to enforce and reconfigure the gaming floor to keep people six feet apart, closing off enough machines and tables to make that possible.

Poker rooms will stay closed, while other table games will have strictly enforced limits on how many people can play at once

All workers will have to wear masks — masks will be recommended for patrons, and required if they’re playing table games.

The guidelines also set disinfecting requirements for all gaming equipment including chips and dice.Cards will have to be replaced at the start of each shift

Commission deputy director Jennifer Reske says there’s no date yet for reopening casinos.

The commission ordered all casinos to close March 16th, eight days before Holcomb’s stay-home order for the rest of the state.