BTC increases sewer and water rates and table whether to increase police fees

By John Estridge

Brookville Town Council members voted unanimously to increase water and sewer rates and took a matter of increasing and in some cases implementing fees related to the police department under advisement.

Sewage rates will increase for town residents by 20 percent in the first year (2021), 3 percent the second year and 3 percent the third year. Water rates are to increase by 5 percent the first year (2021) and then 3 percent in each of the next two years. Council had agreed to increase the rates for out-of-town customers by 50 percent but amended it to 25 percent during the Tuesday, February 9 meeting.

At the January 12 meeting, according to Brookville Town Administrator Tim Ripperger, the average water bill for a family using 4,000 gallons a week is $10.07 and for out-of-town users, $12.58. The average current sewage bill for a family at 4,000 gallons is $25.40 per month.

There was no discussion before the vote except for BTC members and town officials answering questions from Observer reporter Bridget Hayes.

Hayes asked how much money would be generated by the increases, and no one could answer that question.

Campbell seemed upset at Hayes’ questions about how the money from the increased rates will be used by BTC. Hayes had asked if the money derived from sewer and water bills could be used for other projects such as town employees’ salaries and the proposed new town hall.

“You sound like we are trying to make money off this,” Campbell said. “We’re doing it to break even. Our expenses have gone up.”

He said the last rate increases came in 2015 so council members were trying to catch up on revenues to match increases in expenses over that time.

Since Campbell said the rate increase would allow the utilities to break even, Hayes asked how much of a deficit the town is currently running in those funds.

Campbell then said he misspoke, and the funds are not running at a deficit, but if the council members did not increase the rates, that could happen.

Town Clerk Treasurer Gina Gillman said some communities increase the water and sewer rates a little annually to keep from having larger rate increases after going five or more years without an increase. She said the utilities are well run, but some of the equipment is aging.

Town Administrator Tim Ripperger expanded on that and said items such as the Oxidation Ditch at the sewer plant are now 60 years old or older, which means they will need replaced and there are added maintenance costs. A screen was recently replaced, and a Chicago company is charging $5,000 annually to inspect the screen, Ripperger said.

Earlier in the meeting, council members discussed proposed rate increases involving the police department. These fees include responding to false alarms, lockouts, accident/incident reports and Vehicle Identification Numbers (VIN) checks.

BTC President Curtis Ward said these were presented to Ripperger by Brookville Police Chief Terry Mitchum.

Mitchum proposes increasing and in some cases implementing fees. They are: accident and incident reports should be $10 each, $5 for VIN checks, after two false alarms, $25 for subsequent false alarms at the same address and Mitchum suggested $25 for residents who are locked out of their vehicles and $40 for those who are not Brookville residents.

Three area communities were contacted to see what they charge for similar items. On the incidence/accident reports, Batesville charges $5, Connersville $5, and Oxford, Ohio 10 cents per page. With the VIN checks, Batesville charges $3, Connersville and Oxford each has no charge. With the false alarm charges, Connersville charges $50 after three false alarms, Batesville does not charge anything and Oxford has a charge after three false alarms. With lockouts, Batesville has no charge, Connersville does not do lockouts and Oxford does not charge anything but the person requesting the officer’s help with a lockout must sign a waiver.

Brookville Attorney Tammy Davis said she thought the proposed rates for an accident/incident report were too high and she liked the idea of doing something like the Oxford Police Department and charge a fee per page.

Hayes said when she was involved in an accident in 2019, within the Brookville town limits, the Brookville Police Department had her go to a website, and she had to pay $15 to get a copy of her accident report. Resident Justin Moore said he had an accident in Batesville and had the same experience as Hayes.

Gillman said the proposed accident report fee would be on top of the other fee or an increase in it of that amount. The town receives part of the fee paid to that website, she said.

Campbell said some towns have locksmiths available to help residents who get locked out, but Brookville does not have any locksmiths. Ward said it was a good idea to sign a waiver before a police officer attempts to unlock a vehicle in case of damage to that vehicle.

Council members Eric Johnson and Brooke Leffingwell were appointed to a committee to look at this situation and then report back to the town council.

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FC APC public hearing on proposed solar and wind-powered energy amendments to zoning code canceled

By John Estridge

Franklin County’s important and much-anticipated public hearing on proposed zoning regulations for solar and wind-powered energy was canceled Wednesday night, February 10, due to inclement weather.

Area Plan Commission members were hosting the public hearing on the matter. Currently, Franklin County’s Zoning Code does not have any regulations concerning solar and wind energy. Apparently, a company interested in solar energy in Franklin County has been having conversations with landowners in Bath and Springfield townships.

After the APC members approve, amend or disapprove of the proposed amendments, the matter will move back before the Franklin County Commissioners.

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Obituary for Eric Wright

ERIC WRIGHT

Eric Wright age 62, of Batesville, died Sunday, February 7, 2021, at Margaret Mary Hospital in Batesville. He was born March 9, 1958, in Oxford, Ohio, the son of Herbert and Pattie (Thurston) Wright Jr.

Eric, a 1976 graduate from East Central High School, graduated from Iowa State University, worked as a mail clerk at Anthem, a member and past elder at the Providence Presbyterian Church in Bright.

He was survived by his siblings Alan Wright, Treva (Jay) Hess, Janna (Tim) Corcoran and Cheri Markley. He was an uncle to 10 nieces and nephews and great uncle to 10 great nieces and great nephews.    

He was preceded in death by his parents Herbert and Pattie Wright Jr., his siblings Doug and Reesa Wright.

Visitation will be Friday, February 12, 2021, from 12 p.m. until time of funeral services at 1 p.m., with Rev. Dan Johnson officiating all at  Providence Presbyterian Church 23983 Salt Fork Rd. Lawrenceburg, Indiana 47025.  Burial will follow at Gibson Cemetery in Bright, Indiana.

Memorials may be directed to American Cancer Society and/or Manchester Life Squad c/o Jackman Hensley Funeral Home 215 Broadway St. Harrison, Ohio 45030

Obituary for Paul Kraus

PAUL KRAUS

Paul Kraus, 74 years old, of Dover, passed away on Tuesday, February 9, 2021. Paul was a very faithful Catholic and a lifetime member of All Saints Parish. He ministered to the parish by being a dedicated sacristan at St. Paul’s Campus. Married to Millie for more than 22 years, they had 10 grandchildren and one great grandchild whom Paul adored and of whom he was extremely proud. He had a big heart, and he and Millie sponsored several children from Children International. He would take special time to write letters to these children and always made sure they had Christmas and birthday gifts. Paul was a mechanic for the Car Store in St. Leon and after retiring, found joy in raising chickens in his backyard. He also loved toiling around in his vegetable garden. He was an avid hunter, fisherman, bowler, and horseshoe player. Playing euchre and pinochle with his brothers and sisters was always a rowdy event. Paul was a United States Navy veteran and a member of the New Alsace Legion Post 452 and held the Commander position for 13 years. He served in the Honor Guard at Arlington National Cemetery and was a member of the Knights of Columbus.

Paul will be greatly missed by his wife, Millie, as well as Melissa (Gavin) Hoffman, Teresa (Philip) Reksel, Heather (Mike) Walter, Michael (Natalie) Ferry, Krista (Joseph) Wilber, and Patrick Ferry; grandchildren Hannah, Peyton, Miranda, Scarlett, Hailey, Violet, Blake, Grayson, Abigail and Paige; and great grandson Wyatt. He will also be fondly remembered by his siblings Jim Kraus, Denny (Mary) Kraus, Wally (Jackie) Kraus, Carole (Paul) Weldishofer, Albert Jr. (Joyce) Kraus, Leon (Donna) Kraus, Sandra (James) Wagner, Mark (Sue) Kraus, Maryjane Henning, Tim (Tammy) Kraus and in-laws Dorothy Barth, Wilma Minger, Dale (Betty) Barth, Carol (John) Anthony, Roy (Lori) Barth; and numerous nieces and nephews, great nieces and nephews and great-great nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his parents Albert Sr. and Norma (Wuestefeld) Kraus, sister-in-laws Maria Kraus and Beth Kraus, brother-in-law Louis Barth, and several nieces and nephews including godson Brandon Kraus.

Mass of Christian burial for Paul will be held on Friday, February 12, at 12 p.m., at St. Paul’s Campus of All Saints Parish with Fr. Jonathan Meyer presiding. Burial at St. Paul’s Cemetery will immediately follow. Memorials can be made to All Saints Parish or the New Alsace Legion Post 452. Memorials can be sent to Andres-Wuestefeld Funeral Home at 25615 State Rt. 1, Guilford, IN 47022. Please visit www.andres-wuestefeldfh.com to leave condolences and sign the online guest book. For those that are not able to attend in person, Mass will be lived streamed at https://www.youtube.com/user/aspweeklyhomily.

Obituary for Sharron Rae Beebe Evans

SHARRON RAE BEEBE EVANS

Sharron Rae Beebe Evans, 78 of Connersville passed away on Friday, February 10, 2021, at her home. She was born on August 24, 1942, to the late John “Sam” Beebe Jr. and Vivian Medcalf Cullison in Huntingburg.

On June 6, 1986, she married Gerald Evans in Jellico, Tennessee. They were able to spend 31 years together before he passed away on June 24, 2017.

Sharron enjoyed being outside in her garden and admiring her flowers. She loved to craft and sew. Her most cherished times were spent at home with her children.

Sharron is survived by her children, Belinda (Lisa) Bergen, Misha (Pat) Bergen, Bret Bergen, Jeremy (Dreama) Bergen; and her grandchildren, Kyle Anderson, Tyler Bergen, Bailey Bergen and Bentley Roberts; and her beloved cat, Rocky.

Along with her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by the father of her children, Carl Bergen.

Visitation for Sharron will be held on Monday, February 15, 2021, from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m., at Urban Winkler Funeral Home, 513 W. 8th St. Connersville, Indiana 47331. The funeral service will begin at 1 p.m., on Monday at the funeral home. Burial will follow in Lick Creek Cemetery.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Fayette County Humane Society, 1703 Michigan Ave. Connersville, Indiana 47331.

Brookville Town Council members unanimously vote to begin process to build new town hall

By John Estridge

Ready or not Brookville taxpayers here it comes.

Brookville Town Council members voted unanimously to begin the process of building a new town hall.

And they plan to do it by funding it like the new aquatic center was funded, through public and private funding. In the case of the aquatic center, the town put up a certain amount of money while the rest came from donations by individuals, clubs and the Brookville Foundation.

This is going on a very fast track, according to the Request for Proposals/Qualifications for a Town Hall document BTC President Curtis Ward read at the BTC meeting, Tuesday, February 9.

Bids for a company to provide “all financing services, development services, design services, sit acquisition, site work, labor and material to develop, renovate and/or construct the Project [sic],” are due by March 3, according to the request Ward read into the record.

Ward said he would like to see construction begin by the summer. The fundraising period for the aquatic center took years to finish.

“Although the Town [sic] has a clear need for new facilities, the location and scope of the Project [sic] is not determined,” Ward read into the record.

Apparently, the town council already has a pre-existing building in town in mind. Ward owns his own real estate company so he should be familiar with available buildings within the town. Ward also recently named an employee of his real estate company to a seat on the county’s Area Plan Commission even though other people applied for the position.

“The Town [sic] will likely seek to renovate and redevelop an existing building within the Town [sic], and therefore will need assistance with evaluations regarding structural integrity, schematic floorplans [sic], and complete building analysis potentially for multiple sites or buildings in the Town [sic],” the document Ward read into the record continues.

Following the choice of a site or existing building for the new town hall, the project will continue on the fast track, Ward read from the document.

“The scoping period is anticipated to be a very intense and fast-paced process, with the goal of achieving a guaranteed price and final schematic design in Spring [sic], 2021 in order to accomplish construction commencement in Summer, [sic] 2021,” Ward read.

Somewhere within the project, the town will take over the ownership of the project and provide the funds to cover the incurred debt.

“At a certain point in time, the Town [sic] would assume ownership of the Project [sic] and pledge revenues adequate to cover the debt service from a selected financial institution,” Ward read in the request.

The reason the town is seeking to build a new town hall in an existing building or constructing a new building on a plot of land, is the current town hall is inadequate, the document reads.

 “The purpose and intent of the Project [sic] is to improve operational efficiencies of the city’s assets and to meet the City’s [sic] obligation to provide safe and clean municipal facilities in a post-pandemic culture,” Ward read.

The current town hall is located at 1012 Franklin Avenue in Brookville. It was the former Franklin County Community School Corporation administrative building. It was deeded to the town by the school corporation. Prior to that, the town hall for many decades was in the Main Street building, which now houses the Brookville Police Department.

Ward and newly elected board member Chuck Campbell will meet with the companies putting in the bids and bring their recommendations back to the full council.

As has become customary with this town councils, none of the other council members discussed the situation before unanimously voting to approve launching the Request for Proposals/Qualifications.

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Obituary for Robert Ervin

ROBERT ERVIN

Robert Ervin, 70 of Connersville, passed away on Thursday, February 4, 2021. He was born on October 20, 1950, in Connersville to the late Malcom Ervin and Irene Smith Ervin.

In 1987, he married Amanda Risch; they were able to spend 31 years together before she passed away on March 15, 2018.

Robert served in the United States Air Force and United States Army for a combined 18 years.

He was a member of the VFW, Eagles and American Legion in Connersville.

He owned the Jiffy Car Wash in Connersville for several years along with a car lot.

In his leisure time, he enjoyed going hunting and spending time with his dogs. He had a love for Corvettes.

He is survived by his son, Robert Matthew Ervin, fiancé Cheyenne Gagliano; a daughter, Wendy Lynn Ervin; six grandchildren; two great grandchildren; brothers, Lee Ervin and Terry Ervin.

Along with his parents and wife, he was preceded in death by a brother, Larry Ervin; and nephews, Wayne Ervin and Chad Ervin.

A memorial service will be held on Friday, February 12, 2021, at 4 p.m., with Pastor Chris Lovett officiating at Crosspointe Biker Church, 1130 E. Baseline Rd. Connersville, Indiana 47331.

Urban Winkler Funeral Home is honored to be assisting the family with arrangements.

FC commissioner Tom Wilson drives snow plow in lieu of attending meeting; gets authorization to buy truck to replace one destroyed in fire

By John Estridge

Franklin County Commissioners Tom Linkel and Gerald Wendel gave authorization to fellow commissioner Tom Wilson and his road foreman Kent Ruf to seek a replacement for the county’s dump truck recently destroyed by fire at the Oldenburg garage.

Wilson was not present at the Tuesday morning, February 9, meeting because he was driving a snow plow for his district, District 3, while the meeting was ongoing. The county received 6-8 inches of snow Monday night and Tuesday morning. Linkel said District 3 is shorthanded right now, and Wilson told Linkel Wilson could serve the county better trying to clear the roads than participating in a meeting.

A fairly new dump truck, 54,000 miles on the odometer, was destroyed by fire at the Oldenburg garage in the early morning hours of Friday, February 5.

Quick work by the Eagle Volunteer Fire Department of Oldenburg saved the other four trucks in the garage and the garage itself. A truck next to the destroyed truck suffered scorching and an outside mirror melted.

According to Linkel, it is not known what caused the fire. The commissioners called in the State Fire Marshal as a precaution, but he said the fire’s origin was not suspicious in nature. Linkel said the county’s drivers had been out late Thursday night, February 4, clearing roads. They came back and plugged their trucks into the block heaters. They do not know if the cause of the fire involved the block heaters.

“Now we’re in a scramble trying to find a replacement and settling with the insurance company,” Linkel said. “It’s impossible to find a snow truck like what we need sitting on a lot somewhere. There is a couple available, not exactly what we need but we’re short trucks anyway.”

“It’s OK by me,” Wendel said.

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FCHS students to go back to pre-pandemic schedule; school board members offended they are accused of trying to hurt children

By John Estridge

Franklin County High School students will return to their pre-pandemic schedule Thursday morning, February 11.

The unanimous decision was made after a lengthy discussion during the public participation portion of the meeting and then again during the superintendent’s comments at the Monday, February 8, Franklin County Community School Corporation Board of Trustees’ meeting.

At a special meeting held Wednesday, January 27, the board members decided to extend the hybrid learning schedule until they could take up the subject again Monday night at their regular monthly meeting. During the public participation at Monday’s meeting, one parent expressed her displeasure at the board extending the hybrid schedule beyond the January 27 meeting.

Kelly Bolser said all the school corporations around FCCSC have already gone back to five-day-per-week in-person scheduling.

Bolser started a petition on Facebook to have the schedule changed back to in-school learning for five days a week and out of the hybrid schedule. She said she did much research prior to the meeting. She said the county is now listed as an orange county on the state’s COVID-19 map. New research has shown there is a small percentage of students getting COVID-19 when the students are in school. And new guidelines have students within three feet of each other instead of six feet and no quarantining.

She said the Batesville school system never went away from in-school learning on a five-day schedule.

According to Bolser, the school system has more students struggling and failing than ever before. She said her kids are struggling with the hybrid learning schedule.

“I’m tired of it,” Bolser said.

She said she has fought with her children and has been monitoring their work, but she said they “cannot teach themselves” and she has a job outside the home and cannot be home all the time.

“It’s not fair that our kids have to teach themselves, and I’m over it,” Bolser said.

She said the board members should not be afraid of getting sued by parents if a student contracts COVID-19 from being in school. Parents can sue the school corporation now for students’ emotional distress. Bolser said there is more depression and teen-age suicide since the schools went away from fulltime in-school learning.

The remark about suing the school, seemed to resonate with school board member Grant Reeves. He said on Facebook, Bolser threatened to sue the school. At first she denied it, but Reeves said he had a quote from Facebook that seemed to be a threat of a lawsuit against the school. She said the intent of her remark on Facebook was not to threaten suing the school corporation.

However, Reeves, who is an attorney who represents governmental agencies, said he is very frustrated by Facebook as people attack governmental entities and those in positions representing those governmental entities on Facebook instead of calling the representatives on the phone, asking questions and having a civil conversation.

On Facebook, people show aggression instead of trying to work together for a common good, he said. A case in point, it said on the petition “It is time for the board to stop hurting our kids and actually do what they say, help them EXCEL!” No one on the school board is trying to hurt children, Reeves and other board members said. Reeves and other members have children and grandchildren in the school system.

Board president Sharon Wesolowski said the board members, at the January 27 meeting, discussed all the information they had in hand on that night. On the day of the meeting, Dr. Kristina Box, Indiana State Board of Health commissioner, had warned school corporations not to veer away from the protocols in effect at that time, including the six-feet social distancing and the quarantining of students.

Also, the county was in the red during that time, and numbers of infections were high both locally and in the state.

School board member Rick Gill had children go through the school system and now has grandchildren going through the system. He was also upset by the inference he was trying to hurt children.

“That is the last thing I would ever want to do is put any kids going to the school in harm or do any emotional distress to them,” Gill said. “We’re not up here to do that. We’re up here to do what’s best for the students, what’s best for the teachers and what’s best for the school corporation.”

After that discussion, the board waited until it got to the superintendent’s comments to take action on the high school schedule.

Following a discussion, the board unanimously agreed to go back to the five-day, in-school schedule beginning Feb. 11. Students will have to wear masks, except during PE, music and lunchtime. In classes, students can be three feet apart. There will be no quarantining. If things get out of hand again in the state and county as well as the school regarding COVID-19 cases, the administration has the authority to decide to go back on the hybrid schedule.

Students whose parents have opted out of in-school learning for distance learning can continue doing that, board members said.

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