October 12, 2021 — Fishers

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Tuesday, October 12, 2021

‘IT WAS A WHIRLWIND’ Fishers woman navigates breast cancer, pandemic with network of support / P22

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HSE sees decline in enrollment / P10

Park impact fees see sharp increase / P15

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The Gift of More Time: Jenny’s Story

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

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October 12, 2021

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Founded Jan. 25, 2011, at Fishers, IN Vol. XI, No. 36 Copyright 2021 Current Publishing, LLC All Rights Reserved. 30 South Range Line Road Carmel, IN 46032

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October 12, 2021

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Donors give to healthy breast tissue bank run by Carmel oncologist in hopes of finding a cure By Ann Marie Shambaugh AnnMarie@youarecurrent.com More than 15 years ago, Dr. Anna Maria Storniolo decided to pursue a “crazy” idea. Prompted by RESEARCH breast cancer survivor and patient advocate Connie Rufenbarger, Storniolo began the process of creating a repository to store normal breast tissue. No one had done this, she learned, because no one thought a healthy woman would voluntarily Storniolo agree to a breast biopsy. As an oncologist specializing in breast cancer, she knew that researchers could advance their understanding of the ailment by studying healthy breast tissue rather than only looking at samples already affected by disease. She knew launching a collection bank wouldn’t be easy, but she believed it would be worth a try. So, one Saturday morning at her child’s soccer game, Storniolo began asking women in attendance if they’d voluntarily undergo a breast biopsy if it would help researchers find a cure. “Nineteen of 20 women I had never laid eyes on before said, ‘No question, of course we would do that,’” said Storniolo, a Carmel resident. “I thought, if the women are going to do it, I can deal with the university that’s going to give me a hard time and the lawyers that are going to give me a hard time, so that was the beginning.” Since launching in 2006, more than 5,000 women have donated healthy breast tissue to the Susan G. Komen Tissue Bank within the Vera Bradley Foundation Center for Breast Cancer Research at Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center. And nearly 11,000 donors have provided blood and DNA samples for research at the Indianapolis facility. Those efforts have led to new research and several important discoveries, and Storniolo, executive director of the tissue bank, hopes they will one day lead to a cure, too. “When the big breakthrough comes through, I honestly think that Hoosier women are going to be able to say, ‘We had a lot to do with that,’” Storniolo said. ‘The most important day of their life’ For Carmel resident Stephanie Lesher,

Pam Rockey, biospecimen manager at the IU Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center, pulls a container storing healthy breast tissue out of a vapor freezer. (Photo by Ann Marie Shambaugh)

donating healthy breast tissue was an easy decision. Lesher is the daughter of Rufenbarger, who has survived breast cancer twice, so Lesher feels personal motivation to be involved in finding a cure. She said the donation proLesher cess — which she’s done twice — was painless and didn’t leave a scar, although that may not be the case for every donor. However, one thing that is universal, she said, is a sense of accomplishment as a donor and the appreciation for women who choose to provide healthy breast tissue. “This is such a unique opportunity (for donors) to give physically of themselves in an extremely meaningful way that will help to forward breast cancer research, not only in the state of Indiana, but literally around the world,” said Lesher, program manager of the Catherine Peachey Fund, which provided initial funding for the tissue bank. A donation appointment typically takes 60 to 90 minutes. After a check-in and screening process, donors undergo a blood draw before heading to an examination room. During the donation process, a doctor uses local anesthesia and a needle to remove one gram of tissue, which is approximately the size of two peas. Storniolo said women are generally more likely to donate healthy breast tissue than write a check to support breast cancer research. “More than once I’ve heard the comment

from women that, with the exception of the day they were married and the day their children were born, this was the most important day of their life, which still to this day gives me chills,” Storniolo said. The tissue bank hasn’t held a donation event since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the next one is planned for Nov. 13 at IU Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center. Tangible results Because of the tissue bank — still the only one of its kind in the world — researchers have been able to compare healthy breast tissue with diseased tissue and take a closer look at factors that could lead to an increased risk of developing the disease. They’ve been able to study how ethnicity and breast cancer rates and types are linked and develop individualized treatment plans based on what they’ve learned. Researchers also have gained valuable insight from the tissue samples of the approximately 60 women who developed breast cancer two to four years after their donation. “Their breast (tissue donations) at the time they donated weren’t normal. In fact, we’ve been able to show that compared with age-matched women that didn’t develop breast cancer two to four years later, their breasts are very different from a genetic and molecular basis,” Storniolo said. “When you start down that rabbit hole, you start looking at what those genetic differences are and what those genes do, and you start being able to unravel the earliest changes years before you’d see anything on a mammogram.”

WHO CAN DONATE? Donors must be at least 18 years old, biologically female, not have breast implants and meet certain medical conditions. Breast cancer survivors can donate if they meet the criteria and have one breast completely unaffected by cancer. The tissue bank is especially appreciative of donations from members of minority, cultural, ethnic or racial groups; pregnant or nursing women; those with dense breast tissue; and those who previously donated between 2006 and 2009. Learn more at komentissuebank. iu.edu.


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October 12, 2021

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October 12, 2021

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Carmel researcher studying how ethnicity affects breast cancer By Ann Marie Shambaugh AnnMarie@youarecurrent.com Dr. Harikrishna Nakshatri is leading a team of researchers to study healthy breast tissue to better unRESEARCH derstand what goes wrong when cancer develops, but he’s learned that what’s considered a normal specimen can vary with ethnicity — as well as the risk of developing certain types of cancers. “Some of us can eat spicy food, and others Nakshatri cannot, but those who eat spicy food and those who do not are all normal,” said Nakshatri, a Carmel resident. “That means there is a difference between the normal that makes us either susceptible for breast cancer or any disease where others are not.” Nakshatri’s research and its impacts on health equity have caught the attention of philanthropic organizations, as he and his team of Indiana University School of Medicine researchers in 2019 learned they would

combination of factors that lead to disparities in breast cancer outcomes for women of color — who don’t as often receive preventative care and thus tend to have breast cancer diagnosed in a more advanced stage — compared to white women, Nakshatri said. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Black women are 41 percent more likely to die after being diagnosed with breast cancer than white women. “Not everything is socioeconomic, and not everything is biology, but it’s a mix of both,” Nakshatri said. The researchers work with tissue samples donated to the Susan G. Komen Tissue Bank within the Vera Bradley Foundation Center for Breast Cancer Research at Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center. The tissue bank is the only one in the world to collect healthy breast tissue that is catalogued and available for research around the globe. Because of research projects like Nak-

receive $750,000 over three years from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to map breast cell types as part of the Human Cell Atlas project. The following year, Nakshatri, a researcher at the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center, received a $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Dept. of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program to continue his work to characterize unique biomarkers with healthy breast tissue of Black women. His team is working to do the same for breast tissue from other ethnic minorities, as well. What Nakshatri’s team is learning is that breast cancers are nearly as unique as the women diagnosed with them, and thus treatment should be, too. “We are now beginning to recognize that every woman has her own type of breast cancer that needs to be characterized before we can understand it and come up with a treatment,” he said. The research also has shown that it’s a

“We are now beginning to recognize that every woman has her own type of breast cancer that needs to be characterized before we can understand it and come up with a treatment.” – DR. HARIKRISHNA NAKSHATRI

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shatri’s, the tissue bank is especially appreciative of women of color who provide donations. The next donation event is set for Nov. 13. “I can’t understate how important it is for the tissue bank to be effective that it actually is reflective of the population,” said Stephanie Lesher, a Carmel resident who has donated to the bank twice and whose mother helped launch it. Learn more at komentissuebank.iu.edu.

BY THE NUMBERS: BREAST CANCER AND ETHNICITY STATS 41 percent: Black women are 41 percent more likely to die after being diagnosed with breast cancer than white women $1.3 million: The amount of the grant from the U.S. Dept. of Defense Congressionally DIrected Medical Research Program to continue research about unique biomarkers with healthy breast tissue of Black women $750,000: Funding over three years from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to map breast cell types as part of the Human Cell Atlas project.

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October 12, 2021

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Nonprofit Spotlight Sponsored by United Way of Central Indiana United Way is proud to partner with a network of nonprofits in our community that are making a measurable impact in the fight against poverty and ensuring every person in Central Indiana can reach their full potential.

Second Helpings, Inc. Since 1998, Second Helpings has accepted donated perishable and overstocked food to prepare nutritious meals for thousands of hungry children and adults every day – and distributes them free of charge through local social service partners in Central Indiana. Second Helpings also trains unemployed and underemployed adults for meaningful careers in the culinary industry. Serving as a community kitchen, they don’t just collect food – they rescue food and refuse to waste when others have none. Second Helpings is not just teaching people to cook – they’re providing an avenue for people to transform their own lives. In May, United Way was proud to announce Second Helpings received a $300,000 award from the Basic Needs Fund to fund their vital work in preparing and delivering healthy meals to more than 100 nonprofits in our community.

Seconds Helpings Needs Volunteers!

Volunteers are critical to Second Helpings’ ability to provide meals across our community, to over 100 partner agencies. Second Helpings is looking for addition volunteers and has opportunities available throughout the week: Tuesday/Thursday evenings and Saturday mornings in our Hunger Relief kitchen. No kitchen experience is required, and there are a variety of opportunities available. Click on the QR Code below and sign up to be a volunteer today!

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Breast Cancer Awareness Month

October 12, 2021

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IU researchers seek better outcomes for breast cancer By Jarred Meeks jarred@youarecurrent.com Indiana University School of Medicine researchers Dr. Milan Radovich and Dr. Bryan Schneider recently STUDY published findings from an analysis that they hope will provide breast cancer patients with better outcomes in the future. As part of a preplanned secondary analysis of female participants in a clinical study, the researchers analyzed plasma samples taken from the blood of 196 women. Radovich and Schneider found circulating tumor DNA and circulating tumor cells in the blood plasma of women diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer who have undergone chemotherapy prior to surgery can help predict their chances of recurrence and disease-free survival. The researchers concluded the presence of ctDNA in patients was significantly associated with worse chances of survival and an increased chance of disease recurrence. When the presence of ctDNA was combined with the presence of CTCs, the outcomes were even worse. As a result, Radovich and Schneider believe their research, which was published in the international journal JAMA Oncology, might one day be used to detect residual disease and better assess which patients may experience disease recurrence. “When we think about breast cancer, which is the most common type of cancer in women in the United States, there are several different types of breast cancer, one of which is called triple-negative breast cancer,” said Schneider, a Zionsville resident. “It is one that preferentially impacts young women and commonly impacts Black women, and it is one that (has) pretty high aggressiveness and one for which we have limited therapeutic options.” Triple-negative breast cancer is often treated with chemotherapy while the tumor is still in the breast, Schneider said. Surgery often follows. “What’s interesting is somewhere around a third of patients, when they go to surgery, will have no cancer left in the breast,” Schneider said. “For that segment of the population, their cure rate is also very, very good. For the other two-thirds of the population, where at the time of surgery they still have viable or living breast can-

Dr. Milan Radovich, left, and Dr. Bryan Schneider hope their research will provide breast cancer patients with better outcomes in the future. (Photo courtesy of Bryan Schneider)

cer, even though that cancer is removed, it represents a type that wasn’t beaten up enough by the chemotherapy.” Two years after surgery and chemotherapy, the researchers’ analysis found distant disease-free survival for women with the presence of ctDNA in their blood was 56 percent, compared to 81 percent for women without ctDNA. Patients with the presence of both ctDNA and CTCs at two years had a 52 percent likelihood of distant disease-free survival versus 89 percent who were negative for both markers. “The day after this was published, I had about 500 emails asking, ‘Should I order this test tomorrow?’ from patients all across the United States, and the answer to that is, ‘No,’” Schneider said. “The test today should not be used outside of an investigational setting. I really do think this test sets up for how we should be asking that question in the future.” Based on the study’s findings, a clinical trial called the PERSEVERE study will stratify women with triple-negative breast cancer based on whether they are ctDNA positive and assign them a targeted therapy. The study recently opened and aims to create personalized, targeted therapy options for patients at high risk for relapse and for whom no treatments exist. Schneider said the study will likely take two to three years to complete. He hopes researchers will have evidence to support more treatment options because of the study. “While we are very focused on the group that is high risk, I think we want to be equally focused on the population we gave good news to, to see if we can do an even better job of overall quality of life and survivorship,” Schneider said.

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October 12, 2021

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

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Breast cancer survivor calls oncology nurse her ‘godsend’ By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com When 71-year-old Peggy Miller moved to Fishers four years ago, she didn’t want to change doctors from her CANCER small town in Glouster, Ohio. Miller continued to be a patient of the same doctors for 50 years. That changed when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in May 2021. In November 2020, Miller called her gynecologist, Dr. Michael Clark, in Glouster to schedule her mammogram. However, a few days before her appointment, Ohio tightened its COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, and Miller didn’t want to risk traveling to the state, so her mammogram was delayed to May of this year. After her mammogram, Miller returned to Indiana and received a call the next day encouraging her to have a follow-up appointment in Indiana because of some suspicious tissue. Miller found Dr. Kandice Ludwig at IU Health. After further testing, Miller learned she had breast cancer. There also was another suspicious area in Miller’s breast, but

Leigh Flegge-Schlie, left, and Peggy Miller. (Photo courtesy of IU Health)

that turned out to be noncancerous. Miller said her oncology nurse navigator, Leigh Flegge-Schlie, was a “godsend” for her during the emotional time. “The whole time this was going on, Leigh had many conversations with me, and if I couldn’t talk, I just sobbed and she took care of me,” Miller said. After her diagnosis, Miller had some im-

Your life..

portant decisions to make on whether she wanted a lumpectomy to remove the tumor or a mastectomy. She chose to have a mastectomy, because the cancer had a less chance of recurrence than a lumpectomy. Her surgery was in August at the IU Health Joe & Shelly Schwarz Cancer Center. “When the doctor does the mastectomy, she can look to see if any lymph nodes are (af-

organized

fected by the cancer). I had one that (reacted to the testing dye), so they biopsied it while I was still in surgery, but it came back not cancerous,” Miller said. “The area around the tumor, she took samples of that, and none of that was cancerous, so when I met with her and Leigh, I (didn’t) have to have radiation.” Miller said she isn’t sure if she needs chemotherapy. A decision by her oncologist hadn’t been made as of press time. Flegge-Schlie began working for IU Health as an oncology nurse navigator two years ago. She said her primary role is “to be people’s buddy.” “Medically, I meet (patients) on the day of diagnosis. I meet them on that first day. And from that point to survivorship or to end of life, I’m with them,” Flegge-Schlie said. “I’m helping manage their surgical care, set up consults (with radiation or medical oncology). So, the entire time Peggy is doing her care, I am watching her care. We have a lot of conversations about the diagnosis and what does it mean. We have a lot of conversations just about anything under the sun.” Flegge-Schlie is 26. She lives in Carmel. For more, visit iuhealth.org.

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October 12, 2021

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The Gift of More Time

a taxi driver for her younger daughter, who is 15. “I get all this time in the car with my kid,” Brown said. “In different circumstances I may have dreaded all the dropoffs and pickups, but I’m so grateful to spend time with her. Every single worry I can help resolve and every milestone I get to be part of with my daughters feels like a miracle.” Brown participated in a two-drug clinical trial, led by her oncologist, Kathy Miller, MD, at the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center.

IU cancer research has given Jenny Larner Brown time—and the chance to think about her future.

J

enny Larner Brown was planning her own funeral. She was writing letters to her parents, her husband and her two children—the kind that leave nothing unsaid. As a woman diagnosed with multiple forms of aggressive breast cancer, who had seen the disease subside only to return, these are things you do.

The possibility of relapse remains, but Brown knows that Miller and the 30 other researchers at IU’s Vera Bradley Foundation Center for Breast Cancer Research are doing everything they can to stay one step in front of her disease.

But, five years after her initial breast cancer diagnosis, Brown, is still here. She shows no sign of active cancer.

“I don’t want this disease to get ahead of the research,” Brown said. “I need to know my caregivers have the next solution ready.”

And this 48-year-old mother of two teenagers is making the most of life—hiking sections of the Appalachian Trail, taking family vacations to places such as the Rocky Mountains and the Grand Canyon and, maybe best of all, being

IU scientists work to understand how each patient’s cancer is unique. They are developing new drugs to treat disease. And they are studying how to charge up the body’s immune system to fight cancer with a “living drug.”

For Brown, the bleak outlook from just a few years ago has given way to a new perspective. She’s decided to pursue a master’s degree in medical social work—to help other people with breast cancer navigate their treatment. With her husband, Danny, she’s visiting national parks, hiking, and planning bucket list trips to Alaska and Scotland.

“The moment I realized I could start thinking about a long-term future, there was a shift in my mindset. I became so energized,” Brown said. “There are still so many places I want to see, so much more to do and learn,” she said. “Cancer was a reminder to get on with it.”

Your questions. Our experts. Learn more: cancer.iu.edu/simonsays

RESEARCH CURES CANCER Learn More Scan the QR code with your smart phone or visit go.iu.edu/44Bx

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October 12, 2021

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Fishers family hosts Haitian to help with church fundraising

George to resign from Fishers City Council By Anna Skinner • anna@youarecurrent.com

By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com One Fishers family is doing what it can to support the reconstruction of a dilapiGIVING BACK dated church and school in Cerca-Carvajal, Haiti. Jeff and Beth Pfister are hosting Schera Etienne of Haiti at their Fishers home for two months while all three fundraise for the project. Etienne, a minister, helps lead five churches in Haiti, one of which feeds 160 to 200 children twice a week. Etienne said most Haitian children usually don’t have the chance to eat at home, and if they do, it’s only once per day. Etienne and his team are trying to rebuild the church where the children gather for food each week. When the rebuilding project is complete, the church also will serve as a schoolhouse for the children. Etienne is raising money for individual building projects rather than trying to raise a lump sum to construct the building all at once. He recently raised $12,000 by visiting the Pfisters in February and raising money through their church family and friends. “They’ve been working on this church building for

Fishers City Council District 5 representative David George announced his resignation from the council in a letter dated Sept. 26. The resignation is effective Oct. 27. GOVERNMENT George said he is resigning because of an increased workload in his day job. He is the vice president of development at CRG Residential, a Carmel-based construction, redevelopment and renovation company for multi-family properties. He also said there was an increased number of hours needed for constituent George services for residents in his district. “I have been contemplating this decision for most of this year, but waited until now so that as a member of the finance committee I could assist with the 2022 budget,” George stated in his letter. “I have served on first the Town, now City Council for 19 years. Over those years, I am proud that we have worked to take the community from a AA to a AAA bond rating. I also worked extensively on the Nickel Plate amphitheater and our road network.” By serving through much of October, George can attend the Oct. 11 city council meeting to vote on the city’s proposed 2022 budget. The date also allows the Hamilton County Republican Party to hold a caucus later this month without the seat being vacated. For more, visit fishers.in.us.

From left, Jeff Pfister, Beth Pfister and Schera Etienne. (Photo courtesy of Beth Pfister)

five years,” Beth Pfister said. The next fundraiser for the group is scheduled for Oct. 15 at Rose & Lois, a coffee shop at 7249 E 146th St. Suite 110, Carmel. The shop will donate 15 percent of its sales that day to Etienne and his mission. To donate, email Beth Pfister at bethpfister59@ gmail.com.

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October 12, 2021

COMMUNITY DISPATCHES Fishers Police Dept. announces trick-ortreat hours – Fishers Police Dept. Chief Ed Gebhart recently announced trick-or-treat hours for Halloween. Trick-or-treat hours will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Oct. 31. Fishers couple celebrates 60 years of marriage – Fishers residents James William Rosebrough and Karen Kruse Rosebrough will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary Oct. 14. They were married at Trinity Episcopal Church in Indianapolis in 1961. Karen is a graduate of Fort Wayne North High School, and Jim is a graduate of Broad Ripple High School, both in 1958. They have two children, Jack James Rosebrough II and Kim Freudenberger. Jim served as a decorated Army helicopter pilot in Vietnam. The couple were Real Estate partners for over 30 years at RE/MAX and are now retired. Both are certified in scuba diving and both are licensed pilots. Farmers market resumes online for fall – The Fishers Farmers’ Market will continue through Dec. 17. The Fishers Fall Farmers’ Market will feature online ordering with free home delivery. Online ordering opens at 9 a.m. on Saturdays and orders will be accepted through noon on Wednesdays for free Friday home delivery. Orders can be placed at playfishers.com/FarmersMarket.

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Six months after my hamstring surgery, I’m able to bike, hike and get back to snow skiing this winter. My hamstring is stronger than it ever was before thanks to Dr. Sallay and the team at Methodist Sports Medicine. Rhonda Wentworth Methodist Sports Medicine Patient

Quilters Guild to present annual quilt show – The Mudsock Quilters Guild will present its annual quilt show from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nov. 13 at Cornerstone Lutheran Church, 13450 E. 116th St. Members of the guild and the Community North Quilting Bee created more than 200 quilts to donate to patients in Community Health Network hospitals Christmas morning. All will be on display. The show will include some new items, such as quilt shop vendors, a quilt raffle ($1 each), Steals & Deals (bargain fabrics/patterns/books) and door prizes. Admission to the quilt show is $5. This is the main fundraiser for the charity quilt program. For more, visit mudsockquiltersguild.org or call Diane Dimpfl at 317-550-9080. Send us your stories – Current Publishing is now accepting photos or story ideas to run in the community section. Photos from kid events, athletic games and more are all welcome. Story ideas on new businesses, features, school news and more are accepted. All photos must include the names of anyone photographed. Please send them to anna@youarecurrent.com.

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WHS golfer McGinnis finishes career on a high note By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Sophie McGinnis knows golf perfection is elusive. “Golf is one of those sports where you could shoot 59 and be like, ‘If I hadn’t done that, I could have shot 58,’” she said. Yet, the Westfield High School senior said a part of her is pleased with how she performed in her final high school tournament. McGinnis finished ninth individually with a 76-75 for a 151 total to help lead Westfield to a third-place finish in the Oct. 1-2 IHSAA Girls Golf State Tournament at Prairie View Golf Club in Carmel. Her sophomore teammate, Samantha Brown, tied for 13th at 79-75 for a 154. “I was pleased with the consistency and my ball striking,” McGinnis said. “As a competitor, part of me is thinking, if I could have done this better or hit this shot close (I could have scored better), but overall, I’m happy with how everything panned out.” McGinnis, who will play for Butler University next season, said this has been her most enjoyable high school season.

MEET SOPHIE MCGINNIS

College plans: Plans to play golf and major in international business at Butler University Favorite movie: “Clueless” Favorite athlete: Danielle Kang Favorite subject: History Favorite vacation spot: St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands Westfield coach Trevor Neu said McGinnis is a great competitor. “This season, she has really taken her game to a new level,” Neu said. “She has not allowed herself to be affected by a mistake.

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Westfield High School golfer Sophie McGinnis finished ninth in the Oct. 1-2 IHSAA Girls State Golf Tournament. (Photo courtesy of McGinnis family)

She has a short memory and moves on, oftentimes bouncing back with a birdie in the following holes. She brings a consistency to the team and a comfort of knowing what you are going to get out of her in each tournament. I think one of the things that is often overlooked by many but hasn’t gone

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unnoticed by us is the way she prepares for tournaments. “She does a tremendous job of getting ready to play in tournaments, studying the course and having a game plan of how to play that course, and this has been a good example for our younger players.” McGinnis dabbled in multiple sports growing up. “I played every sport you can possibly imagine, except I was never a swimmer,” she said. “We moved to Bridgewater (from Hendricks County) when I was 10 or 11 and I picked up the game, playing at the Bridgewater Club. I gave up basketball in seventh grade. Basketball was my second sport. After a broken ankle and spraining both ankles, I decided golf was a less dangerous and better sport for me.” When she started golf, she would spend all day practicing and playing. McGinnis attended Guerin Catholic High School her freshman year and was a member of the Golden Eagles first girls team to make a state championship appearance. Guerin finished fifth. She then transferred to Westfield, which finished fourth in the team standings in 2019 and fifth in 2020.


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October 12, 2021

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AgriPark Fall Festival cultivates multiple activities By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com The AgriPark Fall Festival will return for its second year from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 16. The festival takes place at the AgriPark, 11171 Florida Rd. THINGS TO DO The festival will include vendors, arts and crafts, live music, food trucks and more. Fishers Parks and Recreation Dept. Director Sarah Sandquist said AgriPark staff grew pumpkins specifically for the festival. The pumpkins will be available for painting, picking and more. Other activities include an apple grab,

corn husk doll activities, inflatables and a mini maze. “(The festival) will be all things fall,” Sandquist said. “We will have a scarecrow-making contest, so all the city departments create a scarecrow and we place them along the nature trail at the AgriPark and attendees can vote. Internally, we award a little trophy to the winning department. The submissions last year blew me away. They were so creative and all very different from each other.” Fall festival activities are free. It is the last event before the AgriPark, which Sandquist said enjoyed a highly successful year, shuts down for the season. “We doubled the amount of produce we grew and had a

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hard time keeping up with the demand for you-pick,” Sandquist said. This year, the farm also sold 50 farm shares that guaranteed 10 to 15 pounds of produce per week for shareholders. “We need to grow more, the demand has been great,” Sandquist said. “Our attendance has been through the roof of people coming to hang out at the park, play in the kids’ play area.” New animals were added to the park this year, including a pig and some rabbits. For more, visit playfishers.com/551/Fall-Festival.


October 12, 2021

COMMUNITY

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15

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NOW HIRING Educare Chef Fishers’ park impact fees in comparison to other Indianapolis metropolitan areas. (Photo courtesy of fishers.in.us)

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as sharply as this year’s proposal. “There are a couple of factors at play that influenced this increase,” Sandquist Developers looking to build in Fishers said. “One primarily being our city is almost could see a sharp increase in park impact completely built out and our population has fees if an uprisen rapidly over the last 30 years. GOVERNMENT dated proposal Our assessed land value is rather to the fees is high. We’ve increased our level of approved by the Fishers City Council. service. We plan to build a commuThe fees are updated every five nity center, we want to keep up years. If approved, the park impact with the trends and best practices fees would more than double for sinacross the country, and one of the gle-family dwellings and increase drathings we increased significantly Sandquist matically for multi-family units. The was our trail ratio.” past fee was $1,667 per single-family dwelling Previously, Fishers’ trail ratio was approxand $1,234 per multi-family unit. The new fee imately one-third of a mile per approximateis proposed at $3,492 per single-family dwellly 400 residents. Now, it is 1.25 miles per ing and $2,096 per multi-family unit. 400 residents. The proposal was scheduled to be voted Park impact fees can only be used for on by the Fishers City Council at its Oct. 11 amenities listed in the proposal document, meeting. such as gazebos, shelters, athletic fields, When updating the plan, the city looks at tennis courts, basketball courts, trails, parka 10-year outlook. ing spaces, pickleball courts and more. “It takes (a look at) a lot of factors,” Sand“It’s an extensive list,” Sandquist said. quist said about the proposal. Sandquist said the city has reviewed the The fees are calculated based on popupark impact fee draft proposal with the lation, assessed land value and projected Builders Association of Greater Indianapolis. assessed land value, current level of service She said she doubts the increased fee will with amenities, desired amenities and more. lead to lost business in Fishers. Only new developments would be impacted “Carmel updated their park impact fee by the updated fees, and the developers pay plan in 2019, and theirs more than doubled,” those fees. Fees aren’t charged to Fishers she said. “Zionsville is going through the residents. process right now, and their proposed rate Sandquist said since the study is only is also scheduled to sharply increase. It’s done once every five years, it’s not uncomnot uncommon to see this in other municimon for the fees to increase. However, she palities. We want to provide a high level of said fees in the past have never risen quite service for our residents.”

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HSE doesn’t expect enrollment decline to affect salaries By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com

we have a lower number of students than last September, but the per-student amount has gone up due to the state budget being Despite an enrollment decline this year, allocated in that manner.” largely because of the COVID-19 pandemic, The 2020-21 school year revenue funding Hamilton Southmodel from the state provided EDUCATION eastern Schools $5,703 per student. For the 2021-22 CFO Katy Dowling school year, it is providing $5,995 said she doesn’t expect teacher or per student. administrator salaries or benefits to Carmel Clay Schools recently be reduced. drafted its budget expecting an Although schools receive funding increase in students, but CCS exfrom the state per student, Dowlperienced a decline of 150 to 175 Dowling ing said the funding formula also students, which could lead to a $2 changed, and the district receives more million shortfall in state funding for the dismoney per student this year than it did for trict. CCS plans to address the shortfall by the 2020-21 school year. cutting positions that are no longer needed Whereas other school districts have aland by proposing a previously approved ready completed their 2022 budget and may 4.5 percent raise for administrators and need to make changes because of declining department chairs for the 2022-23 school enrollment, HSE won’t vote on its budget year be scaled back to 3 percent. Dowling until Oct. 27. doesn’t expect HSE to rescind any pay rais“Every district’s budget process is a little es because HSE’s 2022 budget has not been different, and our budget process is not approved. completed yet,” Dowling said. “We have not “A lot goes into that for us, but we don’t made a determination on raises for any set any raises as a district as a whole until staff. We wanted to wait for student fundwe get that district contract settled,” Dowing counts to come in.” ling said. Dowling said the district anticipated the Dowling said HSE typically waits for revedecline, which has been fairly common in nues to be solidified before it completes the local school districts since the COVID-19 budget each year. She said she’s unaware pandemic began in early 2020 because of of the last time HSE teachers didn’t get online learning models, student transfers or a raise. Teacher salaries and benefits are other reasons. negotiated with the Hamilton Southeastern “I think enrollment has an impact on Education Association every two years, everything because the state identifies but because of fluid enrollment, Dowling an amount, per student, they’re going to said she expects the district to renegotiate generate for us as a revenue,” Dowling said. teacher salary and benefits again next year “There really isn’t a way to diversify revewith the HSEA instead of waiting until 2023. nue. Yes, we have less students, but the For more, visit hseschools.org. state increased our funding per student, so

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October 12, 2021

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Fall market returns to Fishers By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com

and recreation staff deliver the items to the buyer’s home. There is no delivery charge. Twenty vendors are participating in The Fishers Parks and Recreation Dept.’s the fall market, including 317 Juicery, Grandsummer farmers market ended last month, pa’s Jerky and Wesson’s Canine Bakery. but the depart“It’s a great opportunity to THINGS TO DO ment is already continue getting some of that fall working on its produce you were just starting to fall market. see at the physical market and also “Our last (summer market) was to get more preserved items like (Sept. 25), and we are wrapping up jams, jellies and honey,” Sandquist a successful season outside with said. “We have a great gluten-free record vendors and attendance,” vendor who provides baked goods. Sandquist Parks Director Sarah Sandquist We have dog vendors for dog treats said. “We are rolling into our fall virtual and meat vendors as well. The best thing farmers market.” is, it’s free home delivery.” The fall farmers market began Oct. 2. It Sandquist said the city tried to offer an is online only, similar to how the summer in-person fall market, but a large enough market operated during the COVID-19 panindoor space wasn’t available. When the city demic. Order windows open on Saturday attempted to conduct a market outdoors mornings and close the following Wednesduring the fall, the weather caused issues. day. Market vendors deliver items to the For a full list of vendors or to place an parks and recreation office, and then parks order, visit playfishers.com/farmersmarket. Hamilton County Democratic Women resume meetings – COVID-19 shut down Hamilton County Democratic Women meetings for a time, but they will meet every third Saturday of the month at the Delaware Township Trustee Building 9090 E. 131st, Fishers. Conversations begin at 9:30 a.m., the meeting is from 10 a.m. to 11. All Hamilton County women are welcome.

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October 12, 2021

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WASSON NURSERY HOSTS ANNUAL PUMPKIN FALL FESTIVAL

Cousins Cash Rogowski, front, and Rory Plesniak, middle, collect pumpkins with Rory’s grandmother, Jan Plesniak. (Photos by Jarred Meeks)

Karisa Bowman, left, shows her son Aiden how to paint a pumpkin.

McKinley Kennedy, front, and Carter Manion feed a camel at the petting zoo.

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Residents admire large pumpkins displayed at the pumpkin weigh-off, some of which weighed more than 1,000 pounds.

Lee Saberson carves and paints pumpkins for children.


October 12, 2021

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Current in Fishers

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21/22 Season

SE ASON SP O NSO R

Renovations of the north lobby area at Gainbridge Fieldhouse recently were unveiled. (Rendering courtesy of Pacers Sports & Entertainment)

Fieldhouse unveils renovations By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com As Gainbridge Fieldhouse reopens the month, guests will see a wealth of new features. VENUE The downtown Indianapolis fieldhouse, which was renamed from Bankers Life Fieldhouse on Sept. 27, is nearly at the conclusion of Phase 2 of the Fieldhouse of the Future project, a threephase, $360 million renovation that began in April of 2020 and will continue through the fall of 2022. After being closed since the Pacers’ season ended in May, the fieldhouse reopened with a Dan and Shay concert Oct. 1. The Indiana Pacers play a preseason home game on Oct. 13. “We’ve taken the best, most iconic arena in the NBA and we’re making it even better, even more state of the art, and even more appealing to a new generation of fans by creating a premium experience for all,” said Rick Fuson, president and chief operating officer of Pacers Sports & Entertainment and a Carmel resident. Phase 1 concentrated on lower-level improvements and also included a new stateof-the-art scoreboard. “Even if you were back last season, fans will be blown away by the number of changes we’ve made since we started construction in May,” said Mel Raines, executive vice president of corporate communications, community engagement and facility operations for Pacers Sports & Entertainment. “Everything on the main concourse and the Krieg DeVault level is going to be brand new. There are all new concessions and new restrooms. There are new seats on the Krieg DeVault level. We’ve added a nursing mothers’ rooms. We added a sensory room for those guests who might want to step out of the show or the game for a minute and have quiet time.”

New food offerings will be rolled out at the end of this month. “We are opening up the sides of the fieldhouse, the east and west sides, with glass curtain walls,” Raines said. “The seating bowl is much more open to the concourses. Right when you walk in at the entry pavilion, you’ll see the scoreboard and feel like you are already at the game. On the north and south end, we are opening up new bars that will be done at the end of the year.” A new bar area, the Yuengling Flight Deck, is at the south end of the building that also looks into the bowl. Raines said with mobile ticketing, there isn’t a need for as much space as the box office occupied when the Fieldhouse opened in 1999. The new, smaller box office will be complete in December, but a temporary box office is open from noon to 5 p.m. weekdays on the corner of Maryland and Delaware streets. There will be new grab-and-go concession stands that allow guests to collect their own food, beverages and merchandise, which speeds up transactions and makes for a touchless environment. Raines said the skywalk from the Virginia Avenue garage will be widened. “The intent of the project from the very beginning was to create the sense that you don’t want to miss the events at the fieldhouse,” she said. “We really wanted to create different areas for different generations that like to view events differently than they did in 1999. Younger fans who might want to stand at the bar and watch the game for half a game and sit in their seat for half the game have new options to do that.” The suite numbers have been reduced from 64 to 52. Completing the balcony area is set for Phase 3 in the summer of 2022.

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October 12, 2021

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Expected completion: Work on the roundabout is under way, Project: Roundabout with a full closure of the construction on 146th intersection expected for street. CONSTRUCTION approximately 60 days. Location: The intersection Project: Transmission and of Ind. 37 and 146th Street. water utility work Best detour is bypassing 146th street by Location: Veterans Way between The Cat taking 141st street. Theatre and 1st Street SW. Partial closures Expected completion: May 2022. will occur but access to all addresses will Project: Roundabout construction on 131st be maintained. street. Expected completion: The four-phase Location: The intersection of Ind. 37 and project, which will later impact other areas, 131st Street. Best detour is to avoid 131st is expected to be complete by May 2022. street by taking 126th street. Project: Burial of overhead lines Expected completion: July 2022. Location: Guilford Road between Grand Project: Bridge rehabilitation Boulevard and Main Street Location: Lane closures are in effect for Expected completion: End of 2021 116th Street between River Road and Eller WESTFIELD Road for the rehabilitation of the 116th FISHERS

Street bridge over the West Fork White River. One lane of traffic in each direction will be maintained at all times on 116th Street throughout construction. Expected completion: Nov. 9. GEIST

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Project: Water Main replacement Location: Maple Lane, Zoeller Ave and Wallingwood Drive, had been scheduled originally to be completed by late summer, the project has been delayed due to supply chain issues and has been rescheduled to begin at the beginning of September. Expected completion: After January 1 NOBLESVILLE AND NORTH Project: Small structure replacement Location: 196th Street between Promise Road and Summer Road is closed. Expected completion: Dec. 1. Project: Small structure replacement Location: 191st Street between Cyntheanne Road and Prairie Baptist Road will be closed to all thru traffic. Expected completion: Dec. 1. CARMEL

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Project: Rehabilitation of 116th Street bridge over the White River Location: Lane closures will begin on or after Sept. 20 and be in effect for 116th Street between River Road and Eller Road. One lane of traffic in each direction will be maintained at all times throughout construction. Expected completion: Nov. 9 Project: Range Line Road reconstruction Location: Between City Center Drive and Elm Street. The project will include construction of a new roundabout at Walnut Street (6th Street) and Range Line Road. Alternate routes during construction include Keystone Parkway, Main Street, City Center Drive and 3rd Avenue SW.

Project: Monon Trail closure Location: The Monon Trail just north of Tournament Trail Expected completion: The trail is closed for two weeks. The closure began Oct. 11. Project: Wheeler Road traffic signals Location: Construction started on Wheeler Road at the intersections of both Ind. 32 and Tournament Trail. The project will add a traffic signal at Wheeler Road and Tournament Trail, complete the connection on Tournament Trail from Wheeler Road to Oak Ridge Road and add a second left turn lane on Wheeler Road at Ind. 32. There will not be any closures. Expected completion: Before the end of the year Project: New roundabout construction Location: The intersection of 151st Street and Ditch Road will be closed for approximately 60 days. The construction began Sept. 20. Estimated completion: End of November Project: New roundabout construction Location: The intersection of 169th Street and Spring Mill Road will be closed for approximately 60 days. The construction began Sept. 7. Estimated completion: November Project: Jersey Street Location: From Union Street to Mill Street Expected completion: Jersey Street will be closed for the remainder of the Grand Junction Plaza construction. Project: Grand Junction Plaza Location: The parking lot west of Union Street and south of Main Street Expected completion: The gravel parking lot on the east end of Park Street is permanently closed as the Grand Junction Plaza is moving into the construction phase. Parking is available on the west end of Park Street.


October 12, 2021

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Current in Fishers

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DISPATCHES

Email scam – MetroNet is alerting customers of a scam email claiming to be from MetroNet asking for payment information to be updated in MetroNet Customer Portal accounts. The email contains a link to click to update information, but it may distribute malware or viruses. All emails from MetroNet will come from the @metronetinc. com domain. Learn more at metronetinc. com or by calling 877-407-3224. Homework help – A new school year has added video tutoring services to help middle school and high school students better understand their math and science homework through Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology’s free AskRose Homework Help program. Rose-Hulman tutors are available Sunday through Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m. for tutoring sessions to help students in grades 6 through 12 by video, telephone call, email or chat. Tutors can be accessed via the AskRose website, AskRose.org, or calling by 877-275-7673. Elective procedures suspended -– IU Health has temporarily suspended all inpatient elective surgeries and procedures in response to increasing numbers of COVID-19 patients requiring hospitalization.

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Free budgeting course – Centier Bank has launched a free e-course on budgeting through Centier To You, the bank’s financial education series. The course includes budgeting worksheets for those just getting started and tips for consumers looking to tweak existing budgets. Learn more at centier.com/centier-to-you-budgeting.

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F.C. Tucker stats – The Fishers residential real estate market saw homes continuing to sell at a rapid pace in August. According to F.C. Tucker Company, homes in Fishers left the market 55.6 percent faster than this time last year, selling in just 12 days. The average sale price of a Fishers home increased 12.2 percent to $399,295 compared to August 2020. The average price per square foot for homes in Fishers also increased, up 15.7 percent to $164.79.

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October 12, 2021

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Current in Fishers

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COVER STORY

Fishers woman navigates breast cancer, pandemic with network of support By Anna Skinner anna@youarecurrent.com When Fishers resident Karen Witte sought medical advice about the possibility of a breast cancer diagnosis after a self-exam raised concerns, her doctor told her she had nothing to worry about. Witte was only 41. However, after two mammograms and some biopsies, doctors confirmed that Witte had hormone-positive invasive ductal carcinoma breast cancer. She was diagnosed in March 2020 on the dawn of the COVID-19 pandemic. “It was a whirlwind,” Witte said. Witte not only had to cope with a cancer diagnosis, she also had to make a very difficult decision. “Hormone-driven breast cancer is one of the more common kinds, and when you’re younger and diagnosed with hormone-driven breast cancer, they put you on an estrogen blocker for 10 years. That forces you into chemical menopause until you reach normal menopause range,” Witte said. “What that leaves with younger women is deciding to not have any more kids or go through egg retrieval and freeze their eggs.” Witte didn’t opt for egg retrieval. She has a 5-year-old daughter named Cameron. “I was 41, so even though I chose not to have any more kids, still being told you cannot have any more kids is a punch in the gut,” she said. “It makes the diagnosis sting a little more.” Since her diagnosis, Witte has gone through chemotherapy, radiation and five surgeries, including a unilateral mastectomy. She still has one surgery left to finish her reconstruction. “Some women opt to, we call it, ‘stay flat,’ and I can understand that, because with the trauma alone of going through cancer treatments, you decide you’re done,” Witte said. “But me, with my age, I felt like I wanted to try to look and feel like my old self, or as normal as can be after the cancer.” Witte also had to cope with attending all her appointments and treatments alone last year. Hospitals didn’t allow visitors because of the threat of spreading COVID-19. “Definitely going through all of the appointments, and especially the initial diagnosis, alone was difficult,” Witte said. “I was

Karen Witte, a breast cancer survivor, pauses with her daughter, Cameron.

Karen Witte went through chemotherapy and radiation following her breast cancer diagnosis in March 2020. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Witte had to go to her appointments alone. (Photos courtesy of Karen Witte)

allowed to have my best friend on speaker phone (during my diagnosis), and she’s actually a thyroid cancer survivor, so she was my go-to on everything cancer related. So, I was able to have her on speaker phone for some of the initial appointments. I did see people coming to the hospital with their spouse or support person with them and being told, ‘I’m sorry, they can’t come in.’ It broke my heart for them.” Witte credits her friends, employer and co-workers for helping her get through her cancer treatments. She works as a communications analyst at MISO Energy in Carmel. She said her friends would take turns driving her to and from appointments and waiting in their car while she received treatment. Witte said her employer was flexible during that time. “I have an amazing team. Both my manager and my director are female, and I don’t know if that made a difference, but I feel like it did,” she said. “They had the compassion and empathy and flexibility to let me rest if I needed to rest or take time off for appointments.” Witte’s supervisor, Julie Munsell, the director of strategic communications for MISO, said it’s important for employers to

support employees when going through a life-changing event, such as a cancer diagnosis. Munsell lives in Little Rock, Ark., where another MISO office is. “Employers should take an employee experience view of supporting employees who are going through these challenges. That means going beyond the step of explaining what their benefits plans offer and taking the time to really understand their needs,” Munsell said. “There are a lot of ways you can support an employee outside of the company’s standard benefits plans. What I have done is sit down with the employee and ask them to share what their needs are and how I can be helpful in their treatment and recovery process. “It’s important to have flexibility in your planning process so you can adjust to changes that may occur during their recovery.” Munsell said the team brought in a contractor to provide support and manage the workload while Witte received treatment. “I also want the employee to always feel empowered to make decisions that prioritize their health first and foremost,” Munsell said. “Try to find work projects suited to their ability to contribute while undergoing treatment. Employees with whom I’ve worked who were undergoing treatment shared that their professional work gave them a powerful sense of purpose when their health outcomes remained uncertain. Don’t make assumptions about what someone is going through, even if you think you are being helpful. Everyone is different,

and their experience may be unique from other patients. “Reassure them that your goal is to support them through their recovery process, not to work around them.” Witte also was going through the Hamilton County Leadership Academy at the time. The academy shifted to a virtual format, and Witte completed it. Although Witte is finished with her chemotherapy and radiation, she calls cancer a “lifelong diagnosis.” She still returns to the hospital because of pain and other side effects from the medications. She also said the thought of recurrence is always at the back of cancer survivors’ minds. In her spare time, Witte likes to listen to live music and travel. ON THE COVER: Karen Witte, right, said one of the most difficult things about women battling breast cancer at a young age is taking estrogen blockers, which forces women into chemical menopause. Pictured, Witte pauses with her 5-year-old daughter Cameron. (Photo courtesy of Karen Witte)

GIVING BACK Breast cancer survivor and Fishers resident Karen Witte will participate for the first time in the Oct. 16 Susan G. Komen MORE THAN PINK walk Indianapolis. Witte also has been instrumental in bringing speakers into her work to educate her co-workers on the signs and symptoms of breast cancer. “I connected with an organization out of New York called The Pink Agenda, and they do Webex seminars that are a really great resource for people looking to learn more about the signs and symptoms of breast cancer,” she said. “You can request a speaker to come and speak for free.” A speaker will speak to MISO Energy, Witte’s employer, later this month for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. It will be the second time The Pink Agenda has presented to the organization. For more about the MORE THAN PINK walk, visit bit.ly/3oFQhlB.


October 12, 2021

VIEWS

Current in Fishers

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23

ESSAY

HUMOR

Tidal shifts

Tears for empty nest fears

Commentary by Terry Anker As happens today, the world confronted crises many years ago. Much like it had done many years earlier, and many years before then. It seems that crises, like most things, tend to be cyclical. With each one, we discover that we are not quite as powerful and all-knowing as we’d hoped. The tide rises. The tide falls. The tide rises again. As tough as it may be for those of us stranded by the tide, isn’t there comfort in knowing that it will soon flow the other way? Is it our mission to prepare for its inevitable reoccurrence or to curse the sea for its flow? Among the challenges of these phases is that a human life may be too short to experience them from such a perspective as to understand their pattern. Do we imagine caprice where symmetry exists? Do we imagine chaos where there is order, so when the world shifts, we condemn it as ruthless and uncaring? We wonder how it could do us such harm with so little warning. But what have we done to prepare ourselves? What do we do to react? Thirty-fifth U.S. President John F. Kennedy once famously proclaimed, “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” While many have said some variation before and after, the theme remains the same – seek to contribute rather than to benefit. Many of us believe it. Alas, many others just as fervently hold that they cannot, or should not, participate. “What’s the use?” To win, one must gain advantage. If we focus on our contribution and not our take-home, do we ultimately benefit more than if we retreat entirely? Do we have nothing to offer? Labor, time, compassion? When we take and not give, do we eventually lose?

Terry Anker is an associate editor of Current Publishing, LLC. You may email him at terry@ youarecurrent.com.

Commentary by Danielle Wilson

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“The more you talk about negative things in your life, the more you call them in. Speak victory not defeat.” - JOEL OSTEEN

POLICIES Letters to the editor: Current Publishing will consider verifiable letters of up to 150 words. Letters must be thoroughly vetted prior to submission. Current retains the right to reject or return any letter it deems to carry unsubstantiated content. Current also retains the right to edit letters, but not their intent. Send letters to info@youarecurrent.com. Writers must include a hometown and a daytime phone number for verification. Guest columns: The policy for guest columns is the same as the aforementioned, but the allowable length is 240 words. Guest columns should address the whole of Current’s readership, not simply special-interest groups, and may not in any way contain a commercial message.

Friends, it has begun. My husband Doo and I are approaching the last few miles in the Empty Nest Marathon. And I’m surprised to find that when I stop to rest and hydrate, I’m a tad bit weepy. Me! The cold and dead inside, “Don’t let the door hit you in the buttocks”-kind of mother. Let’s explore. Our youngest of four is a senior in high school. Her older siblings are off living their best lives in various locations — Bloomington, Colorado, France — and she is plotting to join them in their campaign against staying close to home. Fine. Absence makes the heart grow fonder, after all, and I’m a fairly decent FaceTimer. So, what’s the difference with this last kiddo? I suppose that’s exactly it. She’s the last. Everything she does is the last. I didn’t cry at my older daughter’s last marching band competition, but I found myself sentimental this week at her sister’s last dance team performance. I shed not one tear at any of the other’s absences from my Halloween Yard Spectacular, but I’m already lamenting that this will be the last time with one of my children helping to scare/impress the neighborhood toddlers. Lord knows how I will be for her actual graduation! Previous ones have been joyful celebrations, filled with the anticipation of smaller grocery bills and a less crowded driveway. But her graduation will be the last. Her departure will be the last. And then it’ll be just Doo and I, crossing the finish line to Empty Nest, pretending my tears are sweat to save my stoic reputation. Ugh. Wish me luck in these final miles. Peace out.

Danielle Wilson is a contributing columnist. You may email her at info@youarecurrent.com.


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October 12, 2021

VIEWS

Current in Fishers

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Chirping up a storm Commentary by Dick Wolfsie The other morning, Mary Ellen shared with me at breakfast that she had not slept well the previous night. Chirp. Apparently, an annoying sound had continually awakened her. Chirp. I’m a heavy sleeper and am hard of hearing, which is why I am always shocked when Mary Ellen tells me we had a thunderstorm the night before. But as we poured our coffee, I heard it, too. Chirp. “That’s driving me crazy,” my wife said. “What is it?” “It must be a bird.” Chirp. “A bird?” asked Mary Ellen, astonished by my answer. What bird chirps once every 30 seconds, eight hours in a row?” Chirp. Where was the sound coming from? It was now driving us both nuts. We walked around the house trying to zero in on the origin of the noise. We put our ear to the microwave, which usually dings when completing its task. We checked in the laundry room because the dryer buzzes when its cycle is finished. The fridge door beeps when I leave it open too long. Those were not the sounds we were investigating, but who knows — maybe after all these years, our appliances had finally changed their tune. Chirp. I listened closely to Alexa as I asked her several times if she was the one chirping. She basically shut down, refusing to respond. Chirp. “Let’s retrace this from the beginning,” Mary Ellen said. “When you first heard that

chirp this morning, what was the first thing you thought?” “That I forgot to fasten my seatbelt.” Chirp. I headed downstairs to see if my computer was having a hissy fit. Nope. But on my way back upstairs I walked under the smoke detector. Chirp. There was the culprit! How could I not have realized this? Clearly, the battery needed replaced. I’ve always been good with batteries. I understand their plusses and minuses. But here was the problem: The detector was attached to a 10-foot ceiling. I couldn’t quite get to it with the portable stepladder. I told Mary Ellen she could reach it if she’d just get those sexy high heels out of storage. Chirp. We have a longer ladder in our garage. But there were several obstacles to using it. 1. The ladder was way too heavy and unwieldy for me to lug into the house. 2. I had never used this expandable ladder, so I had no clue how to extend it properly. 3. No matter: Mary Ellen won’t let me climb up on a ladder, anyway. We called our son, Brett, who came over and replaced our battery with ease. Mission accomplished. By the way, that full day of intermittent chirping in our house has not had any lasting negative effects on Mary Ellen and me. But our cat is now in therapy.

Dick Wolfsie is an author, columnist and speaker. Contact him at wolfsie@aol.com.

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October 12, 2021

BUSINESS LOCAL

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RITCHEY RESERVE OPENS LUXURY SENIOR-LIVING APARTMENTS IN FISHERS

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On Sept. 29, Ritchey Reserve opened what it calls “luxury senior-living apartments” at 106th Street and the Nickel Plate Trail. Ritchey Reserve is designed for independent living for people 62 and older. The complex includes local grocery and prescription delivery, visiting nurse services, a fitness center, 2 miles of nature trails, a salon, a library, a dog park and pet-wash station and a shuttle for transportation. For more, visit homeatritcheyreserve.com.

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Ronda Shrewsbury, with scissors, and Mayor Scott Fadness, center, cut the ribbon to the new Ritchey Reserve. (Photos by Anna Skinner)

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OneZone President Jack Russell speaks at the event.


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October 12, 2021

HEALTH

Current in Fishers

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Prevail to present fashion show By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com Prevail will again take to the runways to raise funds. The Noblesville-based FUNDRAISER nonprofit’s annual fashion show is set for Oct. 27 at Ritz Charles in Carmel. Prevail works with victims of domestic violence and sexual assault, along with victims of stalking, robbery and home invasion. Registration and shopping start at 10:30 a.m. The program and lunch are at 11:30 a.m., with the fashion show ending at approximately 1 p.m. “There are several boutiques that come for the day and provide selections for guests to shop from, dress our models for the runway fashion show and give Prevail a portion of their sales,” said Natasha Robinson, marketing and event coordinator for Prevail, Inc. “We will be joined by Bash Boutique, Linden Tree Gifts and AH Collections.” The program starts with a survivor’s story. “This will give people the opportunity to learn more about Prevail through the jour-

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A model displays items during a past Prevail fashion show. (Photo courtesy of Prevail)

ney of a thriver,” Robinson said. Robinson said the event is Prevail’s second-largest fundraiser. The fundraising goal is $70,000. Prevail, which started the event in 2012, did not host it in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Seats and sponsorships are still available. Individual tickets are $50 and sponsored tables of eight start at $500. The event is presented by Gaylor Electric. The models are from the boutiques and Gaylor. For more, visit prevailinc.com.

DISPATCHES HCHD reopens vaccination clinic — The Hamilton County Health Dept. has reopened its mass vaccination clinic at the 4H Fairgrounds in Noblesville, Hours are 1 to 7 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays. Only those who are 65 years of age or older as well as those who are 18 years and older with underlying medical conditions or who live or work in high-risk settings are eligible for a Pfizer booster. High-risk residences include health care settings, schools, correctional facilities, and homeless shelters. High-risk occupations include first responders (healthcare workers, firefighters, police, congregate care staff), education staff (teachers, support staff, day care workers), food and agriculture workers, manufacturing workers, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers, and grocery store workers. For a more complete list, visit cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/booster-shot. html#HighRisk. Walk-ups are welcome, but appointment are preferred. To register, log on to ourshot.in.gov. Get some sun – Sunlight is necessary for vitamin D production, and low levels are

associated with increased risk for death from cardiovascular disease and other causes. A recent study showed that women who avoided the sun entirely were twice as likely to die over a 20-year period as women with the greatest sun exposure. So, enjoy the sun - in moderation. Source: Journal of Internal Medicine. Arugula for ulcers — Arugula, a peppery type of salad green, contains sulforaphane, a compound already known to reduce the risk of cancer. Now it appears that the same compound can also help prevent ulcers. It helps the body eliminate H. pylori, a bacterium that causes peptic ulcers and increases the risk for gastric cancer. Source: BottomLineHealth.com Eat sprouted garlic – If your old garlic has started to sprout, is it safe to eat, or should you throw it away? Actually, garlic that has been sprouted for five days has twice as many antioxidants as unsprouted garlic, and it has greater flavor and pungency than the clove itself. So, it is safe to eat, and also is better for you. Source: Dr. John La Puma, ChefMD


October 12, 2021

Current in Fishers

www.currentinfishers.com

29

currentnightandday.com

Country star Clint Black brings tour to Palladium By Dave Gil de Rubio editorial@youarecurrent.com Clint Black considers himself lazy — a rather absurd statement when you consider what he did during CONCERT the pandemic-fueled yearand-a-half of lockdown. Besides performing on a regular livestream and launching a line of coffee called Clint Black Cowboy Coffee, he hosted “Talking in Circles with Clint Black,” a television show where he talks shop with other artists. Country artists Travis Tritt and Brad Paisley have already been guests. All this came on top of releasing 2020’s “Out of Sane,” Black’s 13th studio album and one that retains his signature country sound. And now with live music venues open again, Black embraces his return to the road. “My booking agent — we renamed him ‘rescheduling agent’ — did a great job of keeping

things moved up just far enough in front of us so (live shows) might happen,” Black said in a recent phone interview. “Now, I’m as busy as I like to be.” Black’s October dates, including an Oct. 24 concert at the Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel, are nearly two-hour shows dubbed “An Evening With.” Black has recorded nearly 30 top 10 country hits since his multi-platinum 1989 debut “Killin’ Time.” The next decade saw him consistently release hits as follow-up albums such as 1990’s “Put Yourself in My Shoes,” 1993’s “No Time to Kill,” 1994’s “One Emotion” and 1997’s “Nothin’ but the Taillights” all went top 10. But as the 1990s moved on, Black said his relationship with his label, RCA, soured because of the label’s desire to have Black, who up to then had written his own songs, collaborate with Music Row songwriters. A conversation with RCA President Joe Galante was a turning point. “I didn’t understand the pressure to record outside songs when I have so many songs that I had written,” Black said. “He said they just wanted a little taste, and it broke my heart. If he would have said that

he didn’t think my songs were that great anymore, I would have felt better. It would have still hurt. But it wasn’t about that. It was about spreading the revenue from my record to share it with the people on Music Row, and I thought that was the exact wrong reason to do anything.” Following the release of 1999’s “D’lectrified,” Black left RCA. Although he has continued making albums and touring, he has expanded into television and film roles. Among the shows he’s appeared on are “Secret Talents of the Stars,” “Celebrity Duets” and “Celebrity Apprentice.” “I’m glad I have it behind me,” he said of the “Celebrity Apprentice” appearance, where he sang a song with Cheech Marin. “That up close, up front and personal exposure to ugliness is more than I ever want to see again.” Most recently, he and wife Lisa Hartman Black appeared in last year’s season of “The Masked Singer” as “Snow Owls,” competing while riding in a mobile egg. “It was really challenging in a good way,” he said. “The challenge in a bad way was singing inside that suit. You can’t see. The little lenses you’re looking out of are fogged up after 30 seconds and you’re sweating. If you have to move at all, it’s perilous because it’s inside of that egg. We had inches at a time. But I typically like stuff like that because I don’t see myself as too precious to step into weird things. I sometimes second-guess myself after getting in it. I like being a little afraid of things and I like finding myself in situations where something comes out that otherwise wouldn’t have happened.”

Clint Black will perform at 7 p.m. Oct. 24 at the Palladium in Carmel. (Photo by Kevin Mazur)

FEINSTEIN’S Feinstein’s in Carmel’s Hotel Carmichael will feature actress/singer Marilu Henner with a show of music and memories at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 15. For more, visit feinsteinshc.com. BEEF & BOARDS Beef & Boards Dinner Theatre’s presentation of “Phantom” runs through Nov. 21. For more, visit beefandboards.com. CIVIC THEATRE Civic Theatre’s production of “The Color Purple” will be presented through Oct. 23. For more, visit civictheatre.org CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Buckets N Boards Comedy Percussion Show is set for 3 p.m. Oct. 17 at the Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts in Carmel. For more, visit thecenterpresents.org. WESTFIELD PLAYHOUSE Main Street Productions of “Dracula” runs through Oct. 17 at Westfield Playhouse. For more, visit westfieldplayhouse.org.

BOO ’N BREW returns to Clay Terrace editorial@youarecurrent.com Clay Terrace will celebrate the fall season by hosting the DC Construction ninth annual BOO ‘N BREW Fall Festival from 2 to 6 p.m. Oct. 23. Adults can enjoy a craft brew in the beer garden and the kids can enjoy the annual trick-or-treating event. Children ages 10 and under can dress in a costume and trick-ortreat while supplies last. Children can enjoy activities like a Silly Safari animal show (2:30 and 4 p.m.), face painting, balloon artists, hayrides and a pumpkin patch. Stella Luna and the Satellites (2 to 3:30 p.m.) and Toy Factory (4 to 6 p.m.) will perform live music. Visitors can dress up pets in the spookiest and silliest costumes for the chance to participate in the Pet Costume Contest (2:30 p.m.) for prizes.


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October 12, 2021

NIGHT & DAY

Current in Fishers

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IWS to present wind ensemble By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

of the piece. “Each movement is dedicated to either one of Santos’ children or one of his professors. Some are conductors and At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, some of them are composition instructors. Indiana Wind Symphony Music Director It’s a very interesting piece with a lot of Charles Conrad said different textures and a lot of CONCERT there was an expectdifferent sounds for the different ed need for music for movements.” smaller groups. Three soloists from IWS will be “The thinking was, if the composfeatured in the program. er was writing pieces for smaller Fishers resident Larry Purdue, ensembles, they would have a principal horn, will perform on better chance for getting them “Melancholy.” Purdue performed,” he said. “That was true The second soloist is principal in some cases and not in others. Unfortutrumpet Brian Hoover, from Indianapolis, on nately, the entire season was canceled for “Le Gay Paris” by Jean Francaix. some groups. We got in on one of these Carmel resident Christian Starnes, who (new) pieces.” plays string bass, will perform “Mozart newThe Indiana Wind Symphony will perform look” by Francaix. composer Giovanni Santos’ “Miniatures for The other pieces IWS will perform are by Chamber Wind Ensemble” as the opening composers more well-known, such as Gorpiece of its “Wind Gems in Miniature” condon Jacob and Alfred Reed. cert at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Studio TheA maximum of 16 musicians will play at a atre at the Center for the Performing Arts in time, Conrad said. He will conduct most of Carmel. Santos is an assistant professor of the concert. Assistant Director Nathan Vogmusic and conducts the wind ensemble at es will conduct a couple of pieces. La Sierra University in Riverside, Calif. For more, indianawindsymphony.org. “It’s in 10 short movements,” Conrad said

Pascarelli creates movie on cult By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

writing professor, Jeff Pollard, to rewrite various aspects of it so it would translate to the screen better.” Eric Pascarelli had some time on his Pascarelli, who worked on the script for hands during the COVID-19 pandemic. approximately three months, said there “Over the pandemic I were many revisions and story FILM watched several cult-rechanges. lated documentaries and “I have been submitting it to varwanted to incorporate some of ious film festivals both locally and that into a movie,” Pascarelli said. worldwide,” said Pascarelli, a 2007 “I wanted to somehow blend those Carmel High School graduate who aspects with a 30-something-yearstudied telecommunications at Ball old, coming-of-age story.” State University. “I really hope the Pascarelli The result is his recently comCarmel Film Festival, or whatever pleted 1-hour and 40-minute independent the name actually will be, will get going film, “Chasing Rabbits,” which he co-wrote, soon, so I can try to be in that. (It) would be directed and was executive producer. a real treat.” The Carmel resident said the plot centers The “Chasing Rabbits” cast includes on Penny, whose mother abandoned her to Carmel residents Drew Russell, Michael join a cult when she was a child. Now in Davidson and Denise Reiter. The main cast her 30s, Penny’s father has gone missing. members are Leanne Johnson, Lafayette; Penny suspects the cult kidnapped him, so Holly Anspaugh, Bloomington; and George Penny decides to infiltrate the cult, posing Juarez, Battle Ground. as a new member, to save her father before Pascarelli has run his own video producit’s too late. tion company, Pascarelli Productions, for “I came up with the idea and wrote sevapproximately 10 years, focusing on corpoeral versions of the script,” Pascarelli said. rate and business videos. “Eventually, I teamed up with a screenCurrent Ad TCP 9.22 Lighter Bckgd.indd 1

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NIGHT & DAY

Carmel resident to receive Woman of the Arts Award By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

nizations based on all she has contributed to the Indianapolis arts community, including service to the Indianapolis Opera and Phyllis Feigenbaum was caught complete- Dance Kaleidoscope. The selection commitly by surprise. tee is comprised of members from The Carmel resident several arts groups. HONOR learned a few months Nancy Thompson, who won the ago she was being Woman of the Arts Award in 1998, honored with the Kathryn Taurel has worked with Feigenbaum for a Woman of the Arts Award, which is number of nonprofit arts organizapresented to a woman in the Indiations as a volunteer. napolis area who has made signif“She has a wonderful vision for Feigenbaum icant contributions as a volunteer the organization she is working for, for a local arts organization. and she knows the importance of raising “This award came very unexpectedly,” Fei- funds,” Thompson said. “In addition to the genbaum said. “I had no idea I was going to efforts as a volunteer, at the end of the day, receive this award. I am indeed very proud. she also takes out her checkbook.” It’s a great tribute. I have great respect for A former Indianapolis Opera board memthe late Kathryn Taurel.” ber, Feigenbaum is now an honorary board Feigenbaum will be presented the award member. She was co-chair of the first Indiat Wings of Love, which serves as the annual anapolis Opera Ball. She also served on the Opera Ball, from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Oct. 16 at board of Dance Kaleidoscope, the Internathe Scottish Rite Cathedral in Indianapolis. tional Violin Competition and the Society of Feigenbaum was selected from nominaFriends of Music, which raises money for the tions provided by central Indiana arts orgaJacobs School of Music at Indiana University.

Cellist plays with Harlem Quartet By Mark Ambrogi mark@youarecurrent.com

tion. Sphinx sponsors a national competition every year, primarily for Latino and Black students. The group was originally This concert will be a homecoming for made up of four first-prize winners of that cellist Felix Umansky. competition. The 2004 Carmel Umansky said the quartet still CONCERT High School graduate has a relationship with Sphinx but will be making his is not directly managed by it anyfirst appearance with the Harlem more. The two violinists have been Quartet in the Indianapolis area with the quartet from the start. since he joined in the spring of “The repertoire that we play and 2015. the program we curate is still as Umansky “I can’t wait to be back in my diverse as it was in 2006,” Umansky hometown to see and perform for all of said. “We program not only standard classithese people I know and love,” said Umancal music, but we do quite a bit of contemsky, whose parents, Konstantin and Polina, porary music. We do a lot of jazz, Latin and still live in Carmel. Afro Cuban tunes in our concerts.” Umansky will appear with the Harlem This year, the group became the quarQuartet with Cuban pianist/composer Aldo tet-in-residence at Montclair State UniverLopez-Gavilan at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 20 at the sity in New Jersey. It also has been the Glick Indiana History Center in Indianapolis. quartet-in-residence at the Royal College The concert is part of the Ensemble Music of Music in London. Since the COVID-19 panSociety of Indianapolis series. Lopez-Gavilan demic, the group’s work in London has been is the younger brother of Harlem Quartet virtual. first violinist Ilmar Gavilan, who is originally “When we were going there in person, it from Cuba. was two to three times a year,” Umansky The Harlem Quartet formed in 2006 and said. was put together by the Sphinx organizaFor more, visit ensemblemusic.org.

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Megan Peck, left, and Ashley Thibodeau co-own The Main Squeeze, which is home to five specialty businesses that cater to arts and movement. (Photo courtesy of Ashley Thibodeau).

Squeezing in arts and movement businesses By Rick Morwick rick@youarecurrent.com Ashley Thibodeau and Megan Peck have a simple goal for their new Carmel enterprise: To provide small businesses NEW BIZ that cater to arts and movement with a space to prosper and grow in the community. So far, Thibodeau and Peck already have five businesses housed in The Main Squeeze, which opened Sept. 1 at 33 E. Main Street, Suite 300, in Carmel. “You can find all your favorite arts and movement classes in one amazing space, right on Main Street,” Thibodeau said. “We currently have several small businesses offering ballet, yoga, music and art at The Main Squeeze.” Thibodeau and Peck own two of those five businesses. Thibodeau owns The Ballet Studio of Carmel, and Peck owns the Indy Ananda yoga studio. The women, who met in 2018 when Peck’s daughter took dance lessons at The Ballet Studio, had operated their businesses in a shared multi-purpose room at Mini Minds in Carmel before coming up with up with the concept for The Main Squeeze.

Peck, a mental health therapist, also owns Mini Minds, which is not housed at The Main Squeeze. “We were talking about the high demand for our (arts/movement) businesses, and we both agreed that we had outgrown that multi-purpose room,” Thibodeau said. “We both lived in major cities before and had known about shared spaces and arts and movement co-ops in those places. We thought, ‘Why not do that here in Carmel?’ “We had close connections with other arts and movement businesses in the area.” Besides The Ballet Studio and Indy Ananda, the other three businesses inside The Main Squeeze are The Art Lab (owned by Maren Bell); Resounding Joy (owned by Lindsay Zehren); and JumpBunch of Indianapolis (owned by Stacy McIntyre). “Megan and I already had relationships with these women, and so we decided that these five businesses were a great starting point for The Main Squeeze,” Thibodeau said. “Our goal is to house even more businesses who fit into our two-fold mission of supporting small arts and movement businesses and bringing a wider variety of arts and movement classes to the community.”

DISPATCH Fishers artist Bogue wins Best in Show — The Fishers Arts Council hosted an awards ceremony in September for the winners of its Second Annual Juried Exhibit of Hamilton County Artists, sponsored by Jiffy Lube of Indiana, at The Art Gallery at City Hall. The Jiffy Lube of Indiana Best in Show winner was Margot Bogue of Fishers for her painting, “Build Bridges, Not Walls.” First-place winner was Robert Bratton, Carmel, for his painting, “You’ve Got to Know the Ropes.” Bogue received a cash award of $800 and Bratton won $600. The second-place winner was Deborah Smith, Noblesville, for her painting, “The Light Within,” earning $450. Third-place winner was John Dierdorff, Fishers, for his painting, “Spring Flowers Two,” earning $300. The Cori Drudge People’s Choice Award Online Winner was Mark Rouse, Fishers, for his painting, “Elephant.” The In-Person winner was Michelle Feeney, Fishers, for her painting, “Birches at Dawn.” Both artists received $50.


October 12, 2021

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Jim’s Amazing Bread Jim’s Amazing Bread with peanut butter and cinnamon make a tasty breakfast.

Commentary by Anna Skinner

(Photo by Anna Skinner)

Address: jimsamazingbread.com What to get: Bread Price: $22 per two loaves Anna’s take: One of the co-owners of Jim’s Amazing Bread reached out to me after I wrote a review on Native Bread, a dairy-, gluten- and egg-free product. Jim’s Amazing Bread is not certified gluten-free but is made with whole cell wheat. The wheat is gently crushed, which leaves the wheat cells intact, and therefore Jim’s Amazing

Bread claims that its wheat doesn’t release proteins that would otherwise become gluten. According to the company, the bread is not gluten-free, but it does reduce the likelihood of gluten-related inflammation. The bread has only six ingredients — whole cell wheat, water, honey, flax, yeast and salt. I don’t have gluten sensitivity, so I couldn’t validate those claims. Ideally, the beard should be toasted, then topped with whatever you prefer. I was less impressed with the price — $22 for two loaves.

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October 12, 2021

LIFESTYLE

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Fall Creek Board of Zoning Appeals Public Meeting Notice MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY SUBMIT COMMENTS BY GOING TO: https://townoffishers.formstack.com/forms/public_meeting_comment_form MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY STREAM THE LIVE MEETING BY GOING TO: http://tinyurl.com/FishersCityHall NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held by the Fall Creek Board of Zoning Appeals at 6:00 PM on Wednesday, October 27, 2021, in the Fishers City Hall building, One Municipal Drive, Fishers, Indiana. REQUEST: At that hearing the public will be invited to offer comments on the following request: Consideration of a request for variance of land use from UDO Sec 5.1.5 “Permitted Use Table”, to allow for a commercial (medical office) use within a residential zone. The subject property has a common address of 13880 E 116th St, Fishers, IN 46037 and is generally located north of E 116th Street and east of Olio Road (a legal description is on file with the City of Fishers, Department of Planning & Zoning). LOCATION: 13880 E 116th St, Fishers, IN 46037 The case file about this project is available for public review in the office of the Department of Planning and Zoning, located on the 2nd floor at Fishers City Hall. The meeting agenda with room location details and case related information will be posted on the City’s website forty-eight (48) hours in advance of the meeting specified above. If you have specific questions or want to provide written contacts to the case planner directly, please contact: Jonah Mackenzie Butler Planner II Department of Planning & Zoning 1 Municipal Drive, Fishers, IN butlerj@fishers.in.us 317.595.3422

Fall Creek Board of Zoning Appeals Public Meeting Notice MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY SUBMIT COMMENTS BY GOING TO: https://townoffishers.formstack.com/forms/public_meeting_comment_form MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY STREAM THE LIVE MEETING BY GOING TO: http://tinyurl.com/FishersCityHall NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held by the Fall Creek Board of Zoning Appeals at 6:00 PM on Wednesday, October 27, 2021, in the Fishers City Hall building, One Municipal Drive, Fishers, Indiana. REQUEST: At that hearing the public will be invited to offer comments on the following request: Consideration of a request for variance of development standards from UDO Sec 6.7.4 “Buffer Yards”, to allow for a reduced required buffer yard of 10’. The subject property has a common address of 13880 E 116th St, Fishers, IN 46037 and is generally located north of E 116th Street and east of Olio Road (a legal description is on file with the City of Fishers, Department of Planning & Zoning). LOCATION: 13880 E 116th St, Fishers, IN 46037 The case file about this project is available for public review in the office of the Department of Planning and Zoning, located on the 2nd floor at Fishers City Hall. The meeting agenda with room location details and case related information will be posted on the City’s website forty-eight (48) hours in advance of the meeting specified above. If you have specific questions or want to provide written contacts to the case planner directly, please contact: Jonah Mackenzie Butler Planner II Department of Planning & Zoning 1 Municipal Drive, Fishers, IN butlerj@fishers.in.us 317.595.3422

FALL CREEK BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CASE VA-21-19 MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY SUBMIT COMMENTS BY GOING TO: https://townoffishers.formstack.com/forms/public_meeting_comment_form MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY STREAM THE LIVE MEETING BY GOING TO: http://tinyurl.com/CityOfFishers NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held by the Fall Creek Board of Zoning Appeals at 6:00 PM on Thursday, October 28, 2021, in the Fishers City Hall building, One Municipal Drive, Fishers, Indiana. REQUEST: At that hearing, the public will be invited to offer comments on the following request (“Proposal”): Case # VA-21-19 – Consideration of a variance of use and development standards of UDO Section 5.3.3 to provide for a telecommunications facility including a 199-foot-tall monopole structure (including lightning rod), and Section 5.1.5. to be located in an R-1 district, approximately 28 feet from the east property line, and less than 500 feet from residences. LOCATION: 15348 Southeastern Parkway Fishers, Indiana 46037, Parcel ID: 13-12-31-00-00-019.000. The case file about this project is available for public review in the office of the Department of Planning and Zoning, located on the 2nd floor at Fishers City Hall. The meeting agenda with room location details and case related information will be posted on the City’s website forty-eight (48) hours in advance of the meeting specified above. If you have specific questions or want to provide written contacts to the case planner directly, please contact: Planning & Zoning Department City of Fishers (317) 595-3155 planning@fishers.in.us www.fishers.in.us/notice

George Rogers Clark Memorial in Vincennes. (Photo by Don Knebel)

Visiting George Rogers Clark National Historical Park Commentary by Don Knebel George Rogers Clark National Historical Park, along the Wabash River in Vincennes, honors the young leader of TRAVEL a daring American military campaign. When the American Revolution began, the British Province of Quebec included the land north of the Ohio River between the Mississippi River and the Appalachians. Quebec Lt. Gov. Henry Hamilton, stationed at Fort Detroit, enforced a royal proclamation barring further European settlement by encouraging Native Americans to attack settlers. In 1777, 25-year-old George Rogers Clark convinced Virginia Gov. Patrick Henry to authorize him to recruit volunteers to attack British outposts. During 1778, Clark and 175 frontiersmen captured Fort Kaskaskia, along the Mississippi, and Fort Sackville, along the Wabash. Hamilton soon recaptured Fort Sackville. After learning from Italian ally Francis Vigo (for whom Vigo County was named) that Hamilton was there, Clark led 170 American and French volunteers through harsh winter conditions from Kaskaskia back to Fort Sackville. A surprised Hamilton surrendered and was taken prisoner on Feb. 25, 1779. Virginia then claimed Quebec Province south of the Great Lakes, which later became the Northwest Territory. Clark, hailed as the “Conqueror of the Old Northwest,” was supported later in life by his brother, William, co-leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. In the 1930s, Indiana and the United States jointly erected a classical-style circular memorial to George Rogers Clark (for whom Clark County was named) on the pre-

Statue of Francis Vigo in Vincennes.

George Rogers Clark statue in Vincennes.

sumed site of Fort Sackville. The 80-foot-tall granite structure features a dome resting on 16 columns. Writing above the columns reads: “The Conquest of the West -- George Rogers Clark and The Frontiersmen of the American Revolution.” Inside, a 7 1/2-foottall bronze statue of a uniformed young Clark is surrounded by seven 16-foot by 28-foot murals depicting scenes from his famous expedition. The memorial grounds became a National Historical Park in 1966 and include a riverside statue of Vigo.

Don Knebel is a local resident who works for Barnes & Thornburg LLP. For the full column visit donknebel. com. You may contact him at editorial@youarecurrent.com.


October 12, 2021

LIFESTYLE

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Names behind the eponyms Commentary by Curtis Honeycutt If Mr. Rogers has taught us anything, it’s that men can wear cardigans. I know, I know — Mr. Rogers has given us much more than mere sartorial advice. GRAMMAR GUY However, when fall weather rolls around, I can’t help but think of how well Rogers wore his after-work zip-up sweaters. As autumn dawns, I get excited about college football, scalding-hot soup, pumpkin-flavored everything and warm woolen cardigans. This got me to thinking: From where do we get the word “cardigan”? The cardigan is named after Lord Cardigan, also known as James Brundell, 7th Earl of Cardigan. Lord Cardigan won fame for his questionable leadership during the Crimean War. In October 1854, he led his British Light Cavalry Brigade against Russian troops at the Battle of Balaclava. Although Cardigan lost 107 out of 654 of his men, his troops reached the Russian battery and took out the enemy’s guns. Lord Cardigan came back without a scratch. Capitalizing on Lord Cardigan’s military legend, clothiers began calling the knitted

military jacket he and other officers wore during the war “cardigan jackets” and “cardigan waistcoats.” This term for naming an item after a person is called an eponym. Although Lord Cardigan didn’t invent or design the cardigan, many eponyms are named after the person who either discovered a place or invented an item. We see this in the Caesar salad, a salad named after Caesar Cardini, an Italian restauranteur who operated the aptly named Tijuana restaurant, Caesar’s, in the early 1900s.

As autumn dawns, I get excited about college football, scalding-hot soup, pumpkin-flavored everything and warm woolen cardigans. This got me to thinking: From where do we get the word “cardigan”? – CURTIS HONEYCUTT

Other examples of eponyms credited to their creator or discoverer include America, nicotine, silhouette, saxophone, sandwich and boycott. I’d rather be known as the guy who invented the sandwich than the poster child for saying “no” to things. Believe it or not, the cardigan isn’t the

only eponymous clothing term that emerged from the Crimean War. The largest global conflict of the mid-1850s also gave us the “raglan” sleeve. Named after Fitzroy James Henry Somerset, 1st Baron of Raglan, a raglan sleeve is “a sleeve that extends to the neckline with slanted seams from the underarm to the neck.” Poor Baron Raglan lost his arm during the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, resulting in an adapted coat sleeve to adjust for his missing arm. Years later, Baron Raglan was the commander over Lord Cardigan Many of the soldiers in the Battle of Balaclava wore face masks to keep warm. These were later known as “balaclavas.” As fall begins, let’s take a moment to recognize that eponyms are all around us — regardless of whether you measure the diminished temperatures in Fahrenheit or Celcius. Both temperature-measuring systems are eponyms. Curtis Honeycutt is a national award-winning, syndicated humor writer. Connect with him on Twitter (@curtishoneycutt) or at curtishoneycutt.com.

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FISHERS PLAT COMMITTEE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CASE PP-21-14 MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY SUBMIT COMMENTS BY GOING TO: https://townoffishers.formstack.com/forms/ public_meeting_comment_form MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC MAY STREAM THE LIVE MEETING BY GOING TO: http://tinyurl.com/CityOfFishers NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held by the Fishers Plat Committee at 5:00 PM on Thursday, October 28th, 2021, in the Fishers City Hall building, One Municipal Drive, Fishers, Indiana. REQUEST: At that hearing the public will be invited to offer comments on the following request (“Proposal”): Case # PP-21-14 – Consideration of a Primary Plat for “Milford Park”, a single family residential primary plat with 116 lots on 60 acres presented by Kyle Eichhorn with HWC Engineering (keichhorn@hwcengineering.com) on behalf of Lennar Homes. LOCATION: 11810 Florida Rd, generally located North of 113th and East of Florida Rd. The case file about this project is available for public review in the office of the Department of Planning and Zoning, located on the 2nd floor at Fishers City Hall. The meeting agenda with room location details and case related information will be posted on the City’s website forty-eight (48) hours in advance of the meeting specified above. If you have specific questions or want to provide written contacts to the case planner directly, please contact: Planning & Zoning Department City of Fishers (317) 595-3155 planning@fishers.in.us www.fishers.in.us/notice

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Member Central Indiana

“JEFF” OF ALL TRADES HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC.

FREE ESTIMATES

317-797-8181

www.jeffofalltrades.net - Insured & Bonded

WE CLEAN:

Insurance Specialist Storm Damage

Since 1993

TURN YOUR ‘TO DO’ LIST INTO A ‘TO DONE’ LIST

317.872.4800 sales@procarelandscapers.com

Lic. # PC1Q701074

ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS

• PLUMBING • ELECTRICAL • TILING, CARPENTRY & MORE!

ARCHITECTURE CONSTRUCTION

ROSE ROOFING LICENSED BONDED INSURED

FLORICULTURE

317.850.5114

$35 OFF

Any job of $250 or more “JEFF” OF ALL TRADES 317-797-8181 Coupon must be presented at time of estimate. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Offer expires 10/31/21.

Small Local Business - Servicing Hamilton County 2010-2020 Angie’s List Super Service Award Winner Fully Insured and Bonded - FREE ESTIMATES Discounts on High Quality Paints • Interior / Exterior • Full Prep / Clean Service • Walls, Trim, Cabinets • Ext Trim, Siding, Brick

wallapainting.com/current 317.360.0969

10% OFF

COVID-19 COIT CLEANS CARPETS COIT CLEANS CARPETS AIR DUCT

FF OCLEAN 0% 4WE 40% OFF

DUCTS

0% OFF

4 • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & GroutExpires Carpet • Air10/19/21 Ducts Upholstery • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation Carpet • Oriental & Area Rugs • Tile & Grout • Air Ducts

*

Labor over $1500 *Discount for interior painting only

Upholstery 483-1166 • Wood Flooring • Water & Mold Remediation (317) • COIT.COM UPHOLSTERY (317) 483-1166 • COIT.COM

Jay’s

PERSONAL SERVICES Licensed, insured & bonded • Kitchen/Bath Remodeling • Custom Decks • Finished Basements • Ceramic Tile • Wood Floors • Doors & Windows • Interior & Exterior Painting • Drywall • Plumbing & Electrical

Gary D. Simpson Office: 317-660-5494 Cell: 317-703-9575 Free Estimates & Satisfaction Guaranteed

• Roofing and Siding • Room Additions • Power Washing • Decorative & Regular Concrete • Handyman Services

simpsonconstructionservices.com

FULLY INSURED SERVICES INCLUDE: • Residential & Commercial Mowing • Tree & Shrub Trimming/Removal • Mulching • Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing • Demolitions • Painting • Junk Removal • Moving Furniture • Build Decks/Remodeling

BOBCAT WORK

Call or text us at:

574-398-2135 shidelerjay@gmail.com

www.jayspersonalservices.com

topnotchmasonry@att.net


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October 12, 2021

WE DO CONTACTLESS EXTERIOR ESTIMATES www.currentinfishers.com

Jorge Escalante

LECTRIC LLC

We do custom auto upholstery • Carpet • Headliners • Seats • Trunks • Custom Consoles • We also do boat interiors

Brian Harmeson (317)414-9146

Owner/Master Electrician bharmeson@harmesonelectric.com

(765) 233-7100

threadheadzautomarine@gmail.com

Locally owned and operated in Hamilton County Licensed-Bonded-Insured/Residential-Commercial

Like us on Facebook @ Thread Headz Auto & Marine Upholstery

Carmel, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Westfield, Zionsville

10% OFF

317-397-9389

NOW OPEN!

ARMESON

Current in Fishers

IF YOU MENTION THIS AD

Heartland

H E A LT H I N S U R A N C E

Jorge Escalante

Jorge Escalante • Interior/Exterior

317-397-9389

hetownred2007@gmail.com Kitchen Cabinets • Interior/Exterior • pain

• Kitchen Cabinets

(317) 666 - 4200

heartlandhealthinsurance.com 317-397-9389 jacob@heartlandhealthinsurance.com pain hetownred2007@gmail.com

10% OFF

Health Insurance | Dental & Vision | Medicare Supplements 10% OFF

IF YOU MENTION THIS AD

Owner

TIRED OF CLEANING YOUR GUTTERS? CALL JIM WEGHORST AT 317-450-1333 FOR A FREE ESTIMATE ON THE #1 RATED GUTTER PROTECTION SYSTEM

THOMPSON ROOFING CALL TODAY

317-450-1333

dan@dansdetail.info

QUALITY WORK AT A LOW PRICE

SERVICES

SERVICES

SERVICES

• House Wash • Roof Wash • Concrete Cleaning & Sealing House Wash • Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Stamped Concrete Cleaning • Stamped Concrete Cleaning & Sealing • Deck Cleaning & & Sealing • Paver Cleaning and Sealing Cleaning Staining • Fence Cleaning and Staining••Dock Paver Cleaning and and Sealing Sealing • Dock Cleaning and Sealing

to schedule your Free Quote & Demonstration

master guitar instructor all levels & styles

Serving, Hamilton, Marion, Boone Madison & Hancock counties

317-910-6990

www.pawpatrolindy.com

guitarboyrocks@gmail.com

317-802-6565 317-432-1627

WILL DO BOBCAT WORK, REMODELING, BUILD DECKS & PROPERTY AND GUTTER CLEAN OUT

“The Safe and Reliable Alternative to Boarding” Insured/Bonded Serving Carmel & Westfield

Give us a before call at 317-490-2922

baker scott GUITARBOY STUDIOS

Pet & House Sitting Service

INTERIOR CLEANING/DETAIL EXTERIOR WASH + WAX • GIFT CERTIFICATES For pricing e-mail your ad to classifieds@youarecurrent.com

Locally owned/operated over 42 YRS

FREE ESTIMATES CALL 317-491-3491

317-650-8888

BJT_26@ICLOUD.COM 765-624-1137

LAWN CARE & LANDSCAPING

• FALL CLEAN-UP • LEAF REMOVAL • IRRIGATION & WINTERIZATION • SNOW & ICE REMOVAL

YOUR COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE DETAIL!

Classifieds

VISA, MasterCard accepted. Reach 128,087 homes weekly

SERVICES

Dan H Dawson

Affordable Health Insurance For You & Yours Since 2005

Lawn Care and Landscaping, Mulching, Spring/Storm Clean-ups, Paint, Power-Washing. Trash & Furniture Hauling & Building Demos. FULLY INSURED & Sr Discount Text or call Jay 574-398-2135 shidelerjay@gmail.com www.jayspersonalservices .com

after

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

GROUNDHOG STUMP REMOVAL

MULTI FAMILY YARDS SALE

Professional & Economical Remove tree stumps, ugly tree roots, stumps in and around chain link or wood fences. We also remove tree stumps that are protruding up onto sidewalks and around sidewalks. We grind them and/or remove. Please Call & Text at 816-778-4690 or 317-341-4905.

omaliashsr.com

driveway & Patio

Give us a call at 317-490-2922 to schedule your Free Quote & Demonstration

Serving, Hamilton, Marion & Boone counties • omalias.com C&H TREE SERVICE

FIREWOOD SALE Topping – Removal Deadwooding – Landscaping Stump Grinding – Gutter Cleaning INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES Call Steve 317-341-4905 or 317-932-2115

GUITAR LESSONS

Wth recording artist Duke Tumatoe Learn from professional and have fun On Line or In Carmel duke@duketumatoe.com or 317-201-5856

VACATION RENTALS SPEND A WEEK IN SUNNY SANIBEL AVAILABLE 2021

Sept 23rd thru September 30th 11/15th thru 11/20 OR 11/27 thru 12/14 Dec 31st thru Jan 7th , 2022 *Beautiful 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Condo *4th Floor with Gulf View *A Beautiful Inviting Pool *2 Lanais with Lounge Chairs *Plenty of Great restaurants to choose from *Perfect biking and walking paths *Up to 6 People A PARADISE AWAITS YOU Please email: rkojsc3@aol.com for rate info and details.

Furniture – Clothing (Summer/Winter) Christmas Decorations , Misc Ladies Jeans, Sweaters & Coats (size 10-12-14 ) 12780 Old Meridian St. Carmel (next to Carmel Meijer) Oct 15/16/17 (Friday thru Sunday)

NOW HIRING Hiring experienced lawn care laborers, shrub and tree trimmers, Bobcat operators immediately. Text/call Jay 574-398-2135

GUEST SERVICES REPRESENTATIVE, CITY OF WESTFIELD

This role is highly customer-service focused and requires strong professionalism, communication, and multi-tasking skills • Confidence in answering phones, data entry, and greeting customers are essential • Position performs a variety of accounting duties involving utility billing, cash handling, collections, and accounts payable/receivable • Please send resume via email to blouks@westfield. in.gov or mail to City of Westfield 2728 E. 171st St. Westfield, IN 46074 Attn: Bradie Louks


October 12, 2021

Current in Fishers

www.currentinfishers.com

NOW HIRING IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR SKILLED CARPENTERS!

Looking for job security? Simpson Construction Services has so much work that it must hire five people for residential remodeling NOW. The skilled carpenters we select will have strong abilities in bathroom remodeling, but also with respect to kitchens, decks, basements, wood and tile flooring, doors and windows, interior and exterior painting, drywall, plumbing and electrical, siding and room additions. Again: Only skilled carpenters need apply. For immediate consideration, call Gary Simpson at 317.703.9575.

CARMEL OFFICE Hiring full time Custodian HOA MGMT office – work would be performed on locations around Indy area. Company vehicle provided. $15-$17 with benefits. Please send resume to: jfreeman@cas-indiana.com

CARMEL OFFICE Hiring full time Maintenance Technician HOA MGMT office – work would be performed on locations around Indy area. Company vehicle provided. $15-$17 with benefits. Please send resume to: jfreeman@cas-indiana.com

CARMEL OFFICE

NOW HIRING

NOW HIRING

WORK HERE. BE HAPPY. Who are Clarity Care Givers? We are the premier Personal Services Agency serving elders across Central Indiana. And, we are an amazing place to work! Are you compassionate? Are you service-and detail-oriented? Do you have a heart of service? If you have these qualities, and caring for elders is your passion or could be your passion-please send your resume’ to: apply@claritycaregivers.com or call Amber and Suzanne at 317.774.0074, Option 3. Clarity Care Givers offers our Caregivers a welcoming, diverse, and inclusive culture focused on strong connections, exceptional pay, flexible scheduling, an IRA, and caregiver recognition, to name a few. Come to Clarity Care Givers, LLC Trusted, Requested - Preferred OPERATIONS MANAGER Clevernest is a growing company servicing homebuilders, architects, and residential clients throughout central Indiana, as an Andersen Window and Door Dealer, specializing in the installation of all that we sell.

Hiring full-time Administrative Assistant Customer service based position

We are looking for an Operations Manager, who possesses a strong supportive mindset of “how can I help” and deeply appreciates finding joy on executing tasks and projects on a daily basis.

HOA MGMT office – work would be performed on locations around Indy area. Company vehicle provided.

This position is responsible for the activities related to operations after the sale; therefore, one must have the ability to juggle multiple projects at once and be an advocate for our clients.

$15-$16 with benefits. Please send resume to: jfreeman@cas-indiana.com

Requirements: The ideal candidate is professional, entrepreneurial minded, and able to lead and assist with all aspects of a project post sale until completion; day to day warehouse, inventory, and field supervision; and likes to get his hands dirty! Construction or Carpentry skills required.

SCREEN PRINTING COMPANY NEEDS HELP

in our retail shop 25 hours a week. 12:30 pm to 5:30 pm, $14 per hour. Call Beth at 317-867-8518.

HELP WANTED:

Looking for an entry level employee to round out my help desk. It is a perfect job for college aged students or someone looking to return to the workforce. Primary duties would be inbound tech support calls, emails, and light office work. Mid-morning, approximately 15 hours per week. Please send resumes, work history, or questions to: mkress@theankerconsultinggroup.com

To Apply: CLEVERNEST INC 240 W. Carmel Drive 46032 tom@clevernest.com; 317-688-8100 www.clevernest.com

COMPUTER TECHNICIAN NEEDED

Local Computer repair shop in need of PC and Mac techs with experience pref both PC and Macs, certification strongly desired, pleasant personality & some sales experience. Pay starting at $16/hour and up for F/T. Send resume with cover letter to jobs@ctcarmel.com

YOUR CLASSIFIED AD HERE!

Call Dennis O’Malia 317-370-0749

39


40

October 12, 2021

Current in Fishers

www.currentinfishers.com

It’s time to get back on track. Schedule a mammogram today. Has the last year disrupted your health routine? If you’ve put off your regular exams and screenings, it’s time to make breast health a priority again by scheduling a mammogram at Community Health Network. An annual 3D mammogram can save your life by catching serious issues early. It’s safe to come back in for important in-person appointments and get your health routine back on track. Find a convenient location and schedule easily online at eCommunity.com/mammogram

EXCEPTIONAL CARE. SIMPLY DELIVERED.


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