Harrison County Planning Commission approves plans for 280,000 sq ft distribution center...

Within a a few months, Lanesville will be home to a 280,000 sq ft warehouse dedicated to the sorting and distribution of goods. On Thursday, September 2nd, the Harrison County Planning Commission approved plans from developer Ambrose Property Group to build the facility and they will break ground very soon. Ambrose Property Group is building with a client lined up to lease the property and is not able to reveal the company’s identity due to an NDA.

Ambrose insists that this building will be the “first of its kind in Indiana" with an emphasis on automation and robotics. Their client intends to have two shifts with 216 employees working first, 132 working the second.

The facility will be located at the corner of Pete Schickel Way and Crandall-Lanesville Rd. The plans include extensive landscaping, sound barriers, lighting regulations, and retention ponds to reduce the impact to the neighboring homes.

Several residents spoke up during the meeting, expressing concerns about the project. One resident insisting that:

"We don't know our neighbor is...we can't oppose it because we don't know who we are opposing...we don't know if it's Amazon, we don't know who."

To better understand this project and its implications, we recommend you watch the following video of the vote and listen to the meeting audio in full:


County council denies funding for Health Department, reluctant to reconsider…

CLICK HERE AND SKIP TO 1:28:00 to watch this discussion

Last night the county council discussed a letter they received from the Harrison County Health Department after voting to deny funding for new positions in 2022.

Councilmember Kyle Nix read aloud the last line of the letter — a strong point of view from the HC Health Department:

“We cannot continue to do this without adequate support in terms of number of staff and compensation. The health department will have no choice but to make hard decisions as to the level and quality of services it will be able to provide.”

The health department insists that they are understaffed and overworked and in need of the additional positions. The council discussed the letter at length, but did not express any interest in reversing the decision.

We recommend you watch the discussion to learn more.


Masks optional for K-8 at North Harrison Schools starting Monday...

OFFICIAL STATEMENT FROM NORTH HARRISON SUPERINTENDENT - FRIDAY, AUGUST 27th:

Parents, Guardians, Students, and Staff:

This year our main goal has been to return to full in-person instruction. We want to keep our schools open and our students in the classroom with direct instruction from their teachers. The message we have received is that our school community wants this as well. The one thing that everyone agrees on is that we all want our schools open and our students in school. No parent or educator wants a repeat of last year. With the help and understanding of our entire school community, we have been able to keep our schools open and allow the vast majority of our families to send their children to school every day.

The North Harrison School Board had asked that K-8 mask up for two weeks ending today. As a district, we have stated our intention from the start to examine the data as it relates to our school community and to track the numbers in our specific schools. We did have some early challenges. Our high school numbers did increase and have fallen back. As you know, the numbers at our other buildings went up at the start of the year. At this point they have returned to much lower levels.

Starting Monday, August 30th, we are going to revert to a Parent Choice Option for masking K-8 with some important qualifiers. We continue to strongly recommend masks for everyone. For our purposes a face shield is also acceptable. It is important for all parents to note that if your child continues to consistently wear a mask at school, then it is unlikely that they will be contact traced. That bears repeating; if your child continues to wear a mask at school they will not be contact traced unless there is an unusual circumstance. We will do our very best to manage the distancing and exposure minutes that the IDOH guidance outlines to accommodate everyone. Many more students are electing to wear masks at the high school and this has led to reduced contact tracing. Our data indicates that few if any of our mask wearers have come up positive. While that is not particularly scientific, it is encouraging.

This will not be perfect. We believe we can make this work. However, everything will be determined by the data that we see in our buildings. It is our new normal.

Our school community must stay together in order to keep our schools open and our kids in school. Please do not send sick kids to school. If you have positive cases in your home, your kids have to stay home. Many of the cases we have had to process and trace have involved sick kids coming to school. Sick kids coming to school could be our undoing. We want to make this work for everyone, but everyone has to do their part.

As a reminder, federal regulations for public transportation require face coverings on school buses for all students and staff. This federal mandate has been extended until January of 2022. This does greatly diminish the contact tracing on buses.

We ask for your grace, patience, and understanding as we navigate this challenging time.

Sincerely,

Dr. Lance Richards

Superintendent

North Harrison Community Schools

Parks Department increases camping fees due to clerical error...

Graylin Porter - Reporter

Last night the Parks Department voted to raise 2022 rates for modern camping at Buffalo Trace.

This increase is due to a clerical error. When putting up the rates for the Pal-Wow festival, the Parks Department entered them in wrong and and all camping sites were sold out before they realized the error. Rather than fix the rate going forward, it will now be increased to $48. Skip to 37:50 in our audio recording of the meeting to hear details

Also, the board voted to close the Indian Creek Trail between Rothrock and Valley View Bridges for the following dates and times:

Daytime closure: November 12th - November 15th (will be open 5pm -dark)
FULLTIME CLOSURE: Nov 22 - Dec 22 (gates on Rothrock & Valley View bridges locked to prevent trail traffic)

This is the annual closure due to the Parks' Christmas hayride events. To hear the vote & discussion on the bridge closure, skip to 1:08:00 in our recording.

Skip to 1:09:35 to hear an update about the Parks Department's move in The Wright Center, which accordingly to superintendent Larry Shickles is "way behind schedule."


Harrison County Hospital in need of $328,207 to cover annual shortfall...

CLICK here and skip to 40:30 in the meeting video to watch his presentation and the council's questions

Last night's county council meeting featured an annual report and additional request from Harrison County Hospital CFO Chuck Wiley. Wiley presented a request of $328,207 to cover a shortfall.

EMS manager Joe Squire also mentioned that larger buildings will be needed in the next 5-10 years.



Council votes to increase funding for Harrison County Animal Control...

Alex Porter - Reporter


SKIP TO 27:00 IN the meeting video to watch the council’s discussion and vote:

The Harrison County Council has agreed to increase funding for Harrison County Animal Control by a 6-1 vote. This increase includes the creation of a new full-time position and increase in allotment for part-time pay.

The majority of the council was in favor of this increase with councilmember Kyle Nix making the initial motion. Holli Castetter was vehemently opposed to the increase, stating that

“at some point, you got to say this is enough…you’ve got to get some outside funding.”

YOU CAN ALSO HEAR THEIR DISCUSSION AND VOTE by Skipping to the 27:00 Mark in our audio recording:


Funding for Main Street Corydon in jeopardy…

RECORDING BY LEAH PORTER

Last night the Corydon Town Council heard from Main Street Corydon in regards to their budget and funding going forward. Jim Koerber presented a request from Main Street to the town council of $50,000. This request was passionately debated and no consensus was reached.

The town council is reluctant to provide the funding. Town council president Les Rhoades stated that

“Our revenue from the county is not very much...I don't see how we can give you the $50,000."

As of January 1, 2021, the Town of Corydon has $2.4million in its general fund and $1.3million in riverboat. The general fund saw an increase of $250,000 in the general fund over the course of 2020.

CLICk here for a full report of cash & investments for the town of Corydon

To listen to this discussion, start our part 2 recording at the beginning:

Masks now required for grades K-8 at North Harrison Schools...

Mask mandate starting August 16th for North Harrison Schools, grades K-8.

Please the following statement from superintendent Dr. Lance Richards:

Parents, Guardians, Students, and Staff:

At this point everyone knows what is presently happening in regards to the Delta variant and the increased caseloads that are being seen in our area. At the time that we established our return to school plan, our county and district were seeing relatively few positive Covid cases. It seemed that our state, county, and community had turned a corner on Covid.

As a result of our current caseload, on Monday, August 16th, we are requiring all students and adults in grades K – 8 to wear masks in our buildings during the school day regardless of vaccination status, unless a medical situation or ADA compliance dictates otherwise.

At this point it is a two week masking requirement. We will reassess at that time to determine our path forward.

This requirement does NOT impact the high school at this time. We will continue to monitor their status and adjust if necessary.

At the outset we promised to examine the data as it relates to our school community specifically. We continue to track the numbers in our specific schools. If you follow the NH Covid Dashboard on our website, you will note that our elementary schools have been particularly impacted. Our middle school has seen several cases as well. Interestingly, our high school data has been very good with zero cases reported thus far in our students.

This year our main goal has been to return to full in-person instruction. We want to keep our schools open and our students in the classroom with direct instruction from their teachers. Everyone in our corporation is committed to closing the gap on the learning loss that many students experienced last year. We know that our school community wants this as well. No parent or educator wants a repeat of last year.

A big concern for us is the number of students who have to miss school due to contact tracing. Each positive case can then impact 20 to 30 students. This effort will shrink our close contact radius to three feet rather than six. At the close of last year our number of students in quarantine had been cut by more than half. Simply put it keeps more kids in school and in person. (Please note that the guidance on how we conduct contact tracing is set by the Indiana Department of Health. This framework is not something that we get to determine.)

As a reminder, federal regulations for public transportation require face coverings on school buses for all students and staff. This policy will continue until the federal entities change it.

At present, there are no mask requirements for outdoor activities.

We appreciate everyone’s patience and understanding as we move forward. We fully recognize the divergent opinions on masks and Covid in our community. I have spoken with many of you on this topic. We will continue to monitor our data and adjust accordingly.

Sincerely,

Dr. Lance Richards

Superintendent

North Harrison Community Schools

North Harrison School expresses support for a mask mandate policy that best represents what is need for the school corporation...

ASHley Black - Reporter


The North Harrison Community School Board Meeting began at 7:00p with all school board members present. The first 8 minutes include the adoption of the agenda, approvals for the July 2021 meeting minutes, claims, payrolls and the bank reconciliation. There were no school presentations this month, but the floor was opened up for public participation at the school board meeting.

Community members and parents of children in the school district, Ashley Black and Sara Beach, stepped to the podium to discuss implementing a mask mandate for grades K-6 due to climbing cases in the school district. As of 4:00pm on the date of the school board meeting, there were 17 confirmed student cases within the school system, 14 of which were at the elementary level.

Go to the 8:00 minute mark to see their comments.

The rest of the meeting included several resignations and new hire appointments, approval for a legal service retainer, and approval for the payment of the Teacher's Appreciation Grant. The meeting concluded with comments from each board member and a follow up from the superintendent, Dr. Lance Richards. Though each of them had different perspectives on the topic, every school board member expressed their support of a mask mandate policy that best represents what is needed for the school corporation.

Go to the 30:00 minute mark for each of their remarks.

Dr. Richards concluded the meeting by saying more information would be sent out Friday, August 13th, in regards to the topic. He also reiterated how important it was for students to stay home when they do not feel well, in order to help with transmission at school.

Council begins budget talks with debates on wage increases for county employees...

Nate adams - Reporter

Since they do not have their books, and won't until they make some preliminary decisions, the council has decided to cancel the Thursday Aug 12th meeting. This will enable the Auditor's office to compile the records requests the council has made regarding the salaries and wages of county employees.

The discussion at tonight's meeting proposed to raise all of the county employees to salary/wage levels at the median of counties surveyed for the 2020 salary report (based on 2019 data). Back-of-the-envelope calculations estimate this to cost around $305,000 plus PERF & FICA contributions. An across the board percentage increase will then be applied to all employees. The percentage increase will be decided at the next meeting on Wednesday, Aug 18th at 6pm.

TO HEAR THE DISCUSSION OF COUNTY EMPLOYEE WAGES AND SALARIES, SKIP TO 8:10 in our recording:

Additionally, councilmember Kyle Nix is quite concerned about oversight of Riverboat Funds. At his request, the council is requesting the budgets and expenditures of all township trustees offices and school districts. He is concerned that some recipients may be hoarding the funds "as they did in Elizabeth." Councilwoman Castetter expressed concerns that some trustees may have paid themselves or family members inappropriately or inappropriately charged expenses to the office.
(Reporters Note: Usually the oversight of a township trustee's office is handled by the township's Advisory Board.)

Also discussed was potentially bringing an end to the property tax debt reduction payments made to the schools. The council is concerned that they may need to raise property taxes in order to continue the payments in their current form and it may be more fair to all taxpayers if the payments were made to the taxpayers directly rather than to the schools on their behalf. Several members also expressed concern that the debt reduction payments have only encouraged the schools to accumulate more debt.

Fire districts were also discussed and the council is looking to provide them with $300,000 to be spent at the discretion of the chiefs. Several members expressed concern that the current method of payments just made a passthrough for individual volunteers to receive riverboat funds.

County council hears from more 2022 budget proposals from various departments...

Last night the council heard multiple presentations from government organizations regarding 2022 budget requests. Time markers in meeting video for the following departments:

April Breeden, Harrison County Animal Control - 37:00

Kevin Russel, Harrison County Highway Department - 38:30

Larry Shickles, Harrison County Parks Department - 41:00

Judge John Evans, Harrison County Circuit Court - 1:09:36

Kevin Russel, Harrison County Highway Department - 1:16:10

Harrison County resident Deborah Davenport also spoke to the council, advocating for increased funding for Harrison County Animal Control. Her presentation is a thorough description of the challenges this department is currently facing and the emotional strength of the HCAC employees.

She highlights how low HCAC salaries are in comparison to neighboring communities and has interviewed multiple HCAC employees about their experience.

If you are invested in this ongoing issue, we highly recommend watching her presentation:


Commissioners and council again at odds with one another...

At the Commissioners meeting Monday morning, county engineer Kevin Russel provided the latest updates from the Highway Department. Commissioner Jim Heitkemper shared thoughts about the recent $900,000 request that went to the Council in order "to pave these roads so we don't get behind the curve of keeping up the roads". He asked Mr. Russel to take out Doolittle HIll to reduce the overall cost before going back to the Council.

Heitkemper later relayed a comment he'd made at the "farm store" the other day saying:

"We need to move forward and start taking care of our roads... If nobody plays politics, we can get the job done by the end of the year."

Mr. Russel responded..."My best advice would be.... the way that's set up, council and commissioners have to work together to sort out what you're going to do.... your best bet is probably to reach out and talk to each one of those individually and see what you can do to make the case with them between now and next Monday."

Mr. Heitkemper responded, "I will do that, and I will continue to do that... sad thing is I only got 2 Council members that are really ready to go and call me back to talk to them..."

Parks superintendent gives update on pickleball courts in Harrison County...

Parks superintendent Larry Shickles provided the Parks Board with an update on pickleball courts. After much discussion, the board voted to move forward with repairs to the existing courts at Rhoads Pool. These repairs will be funded via a grant from the Harrison County Community Foundation.

In addition to repairing the courts at Rhoads, the board voted to move forward with putting courts at the bottom of Hayswood Hill. This project is obviously in the very begininng stages and the first step is to create conceptual renderings and designs, which will cost an estimated $2500 and serve as phase one of the project.

Skip to 33:25 in our audio to recording to hear the discussion.

Skip to 53:30 to hear Shickles provide a possible timeline for courts at Hayswood.

County council approves one million in refundable deposit...

Graylin Porter - Reporter


CLICK HERE AND SKIP TO 1:46:55 to watch Voelker’s presentation and the council’s vote

Last night the Harrison County Council voted 7-0 to provide the Harrison County Economic Development Corporation (HCEDC) with a refundable deposit of over one million dollars . To watch Darrell Voelker’s original presentation for this request, click here.

This money will fund an extension of a natural gas pipeline from Grange Hall Rd to the business park at the Lanesville interchange. An unknown developer and company is interested in building a 250,000 sq ft distribution center at the Lanesville Business Park, but will not consider it unless natural gas is available. Indiana Utilities Corporation will have up to six years to repay the deposit to the HCEDC, with no guarantee it will be paid in full.

At this time Voelker is unable to provide the council or the public with more information on the developer or the company. He states that they have promised 300 jobs and over $20 million in investment. However, there is no specific timeline for either of those promises at this time.

Notably the only question asked by the council was when the money would be required. The council did not ask any questions about the gas line project, specifics about the company and its business, or return/risk tradeoffs for the investment.