Monroe County jail notebook: 1 year of data shows releases at all times of day, night

As Monroe County officials continue their discussion of a location for a new jail, the sheriff’s office has released some numbers on releases by weekday and time—for a full year, from June 1, 2023 through May 30, 2024.

The total number of releases for the year comes to 3,359—or an average of a little more than 9 people per day.

Not considering the day of the week, the majority of releases come between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. The two one-hour intervals from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and from 2 p.m to 3 p.m. show a dip compared to the five intervals before and after that window.

With 100 releases, the one-hour interval between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Mondays showed the highest number of releases of any one-hour period.

The numbers confirm that releases come at all times of the day on all days of the week. Between midnight and 8 a.m. there were 326 releases, or almost 10 percent of the total. Continue reading “Monroe County jail notebook: 1 year of data shows releases at all times of day, night”

Steep slopes: Monroe County still looks to curb building, despite possible state regs on local laws

On Monday at noon, several Monroe County officials gathered to strategize against a land use bill pending with Indiana’s state legislature.

The bill, which is authored by District 62 representative Dave Hall (R), would prohibit local governments in Indiana from enacting laws that prevent development on land based just on the steepness of a site’s contours.

Meeting in the county-owned portion of the Showers complex on Morton Street were county commissioners, the executive committee of the county plan commission, and county planning staff.

In Hall’s bill [HB 1108],  the key notion is “slope.” The slope is a measure of steepness, defined in land use laws the same way it was in middle-school math: vertical rise / horizontal run. Continue reading “Steep slopes: Monroe County still looks to curb building, despite possible state regs on local laws”

Column: Staring into the civic sun in 2024, the year of a solar eclipse

This image was generated by Microsoft’s Bing Image Creator (powered by DALL·E 3).

In 2024, the local civic cosmos could see some big changes, in the same year when a rare literal cosmic event will unfold.

On April 8, a solar eclipse will briefly cast a shadow directly over the Bloomington area, turning daylight into gloam. (Yes, that is an awfully fancy word for “twilight,” but it’s the kind of highfalutin fare that is customary for a newspaper year-in-preview column.)

During an eclipse, in the battle between dark and light across the visible disk of the sun, the dark begins with a steady assimilation of the light’s territory, but the light always reverses the trend and prevails in the end.

That’s either a great or a lousy metaphor for municipal annexation, depending on a person’s political perspective.

In fall of 2021, Bloomington’s city council approved the annexation of seven different territories, all of which are still the subject of litigation.

Metaphors aside, 2024 holds the potential for some court decisions on those pending annexations, which might settle the question of how much Bloomington’s boundaries will change.

Of course, annexation is just one of myriad civic issues that are in the queue for Bloomington and Monroe County in 2024.

Here’s a non-exhaustive rundown of topics The B Square will try to track in the coming year. Continue reading “Column: Staring into the civic sun in 2024, the year of a solar eclipse”