A marked difference
Kokomo Firefighters Local 396 president Rick Daily and two city department heads gave state legislators their collective opinion of the property tax caps during a forum this week.
There’s no doubt the caps will cost the city of Kokomo $2.1 million in revenue between this year and the end of 2010. Kokomo Mayor Greg Goodnight responded by reducing the city payroll by about 16 percent. Dozens of city workers are no longer employed.
It’s been painful for the families affected, and the loudest complaints have come from Daily’s local union.
But another news item this week reminded The Public Eye that there was an alternative to laying off 16 firefighters.
Tuesday, the Lawrence Township board voted to cut Lawrence Township firefighters’ pay by 10.5 percent, eliminate holiday bonus pay and other bonuses, and require the Lawrence firefighters to increase their insurance contributions.
The remarkable thing is that the membership of Professional Firefighters Local 416 voted by a 2-1 margin to accept the pay cuts, rather than see any of their membership laid off.
In Kokomo, union leadership never gave the rank and file of Local 396 a chance to vote on concessions.
Goodnight enters the kitchen
Kokomo Mayor Greg Goodnight better hope he can stand the heat, after accepting the chairmanship of the Indiana Association of Cities and Towns’ legislative committee.
IACT, which represents municipal governments across the state, is firmly in favor of local government reforms proposed by the Kernan-Shepherd study and Gov. Mitch Daniels.
But IACT doesn’t support Daniels’ property tax caps, as long as cities are denied “home rule” — otherwise known as the authority to raise other taxes.
Goodnight has mainly sought a “middle way” on the tax caps. When property taxes in Kokomo were sky high in 2007, he voted (while a member of city council) to shift some of the burden onto a new local option income tax.
Since becoming mayor, however, he’s resisted all calls to raise additional revenues, apart from his attempt to annex 6,800 acres of Howard County. Even there, he’s argued the tax caps will protect those being annexed from big property tax increases.
Tuesday, Gov. Mitch Daniels thanked Goodnight for his staunch support of local government reform. It will be interesting to see if Daniels is singing Goodnight’s praises at the end of the upcoming Indiana General Assembly.
Roundabout goes poof
Last week’s shocker came when The Public Eye learned the city was no longer considering installing a roundabout at the intersection of Markland Avenue and Park Road.
Since Goodnight announced that decision, we’ve pondered what happened. For more than a year, city officials had stuck to the same story. A roundabout, they said, is one of the alternatives they’re considering. City council members knew it, and the possibility had been reported in local media.
There’s been no public explanation of why Goodnight suddenly announced he won’t even consider a roundabout, and that’s puzzling.
Privately, local elected officials say offering favorable mention of the word “roundabout” in Kokomo is the political equivalent of suicide.
Four years ago, a planned roundabout at Park Road and West Boulevard became a symbol for the battle brewing between the city council and the city administration of former Mayor Matt McKillip.
The fight was about more than the roundabout — it was really a power struggle between mayor and council. Goodnight, we recall, was on the council at the time.
Anyway, the city has federal money to redo the Markland/Park intersection, and a reconfigured, signalized intersection will cost almost as much and be much less safe than a roundabout.
None of that matters, however. The roundabout haters have won this battle.
Local News
PUBLIC EYE - Sunday, Nov. 1, 2009
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Gov. names NW student 'Mr. Science' for 2012
Tyler Barnes becomes first Indiana student to be named Indiana's Top Young Scientist and Mr. Science.
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Report highlights need for education, collaboration
The vision of north central Indiana’s future painted Wednesday morning was one in which Kokomo and its neighboring cities embrace more higher education and innovation and they depend less on just manufacturing.
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City will spend $797K on trails
The city of Kokomo approved a $797,532 contract Wednesday with Mohr Construction, a subsidiary of E&B Paving, Anderson, to install trail improvements this year.
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Inmate files tort claim against Howard Co. jail
An inmate at the Howard County jail has filed a tort claim stating overcrowding has caused the spread of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and other diseases at the jail.
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Longtime Lewis Cass teacher fired
As the Southeastern school board convened its meeting Tuesday night, more than 40 teenagers, almost all of them Lewis Cass Junior-Senior High School football players, filed into the administrative conference room that was already filled with about 30 parents.
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Duncan sentenced to 180 days
Less than a week after his arrest on a charge of voyeurism, Arnold L. Duncan pleaded guilty to the charge and was sentenced to 180 days in jail, the maximum for the Class B misdemeanor offense.
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Why do young white women risk cancer to be tan?
A CDC report out this month found that nearly one in three white women aged 18 to 25 had used a tanning booth in the previous year. White women aged 18 to 21 went the most often, averaging 27.6 sessions per year—that’s over two sessions per month—while nearly 70 percent said they had gone at least 10 times in the last year.
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Howard to join with Community Health
With the stroke of a pen, Howard County will no longer be in the hospital business.
Tuesday, a resolution was approved that allows Howard Regional Health System to merge with Community Health Network.
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Western seniors skip school to clean up Russiaville
Kasie Dodge skipped class Tuesday to scrub church windows.
“It was hard work,” the Western High School senior said, with a laugh. “If you try to wash a window when the sun is shining, it will drive you nuts trying to get all the streaks out.”
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Postal Service seeks public input
The U.S. Postal Service will give rural communities in Miami County the chance to help determine the fate of their post offices during yet-to-be-scheduled public meetings.
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Gov. names NW student 'Mr. Science' for 2012




