Monthly Archives: September 2025

Families Turn Out for Fishers Police Department Open House

Ascension St. Vincent Fishers President Aleks Overby (left) and Police Chief Ed Gebhart (Ascension St. Vincent sponsored the Open House)

The Fishers Police Department’s annual Open House has traditionally been part of the National Night Out celebration. But with that date often coinciding with the start of the school year, many families have been unable to attend.

This year, the department tried something new. By moving the event to a later date, police officials saw a noticeable difference — families were everywhere at Tuesday evening’s Open House.

Sponsored by Ascension St. Vincent Fishers, the event enjoyed perfect weather and a strong community response. Visitors experienced forensic demonstrations, hands-on training through VR headsets, and a closer look at the wide range of work Fishers officers perform every day.

Here are more photos from the 2025 Fishers Police Department Open House:

Continue reading Families Turn Out for Fishers Police Department Open House

Fishers Community Center Set to Open November 1

(from the left) Jake Reardon McSoley, Todd Zimmerman and Scott Fadness

The first impression visitors have when approaching the new Fishers Community Center is its sheer size. The building is striking from the outside, and once inside, the open spaces make an even bigger impact.

Mayor Scott Fadness, City Councilor Todd Zimmerman, and the city’s Director of Recreation and Wellness, Jake Reardon-McSoley, welcomed members of the media Tuesday morning for a preview tour of the facility. The center officially opens to the public on November 1.

Fadness called the center “extraordinary, a vibrant place,” and credited Zimmerman and Reardon-McSoley for helping bring the project to life.

“For a community that is hyper-fixated on families and a culture of health, this place was the epicenter of those activities,” Fadness said.

Zimmerman recalled meeting with the mayor after the COVID-19 pandemic to consider how best to respond to changing community needs. The two agreed a community center should be the priority, leading to a public survey that drew 3,500 responses. Those results helped shape not only the Community Center, located at 121st Street and Hoosier Road, but also the recently completed Arts Center at the City Hall complex.

Following remarks, McSoley led a tour of the facility, which is designed to serve residents and nonresidents alike. Fishers residents will receive discounted membership rates, but many parts of the center—including the indoor playground and walking track—will be free for anyone with a community pass.

Here’s a breakdown of what’s free with a community pass (available to all, regardless of residency) and what requires a membership:

Free with Community Pass:

  • Fishers Health Department HQ & Clinic

  • Sahm’s Community Café

  • Public meeting spaces

  • Indoor Playground: 5,300 sq. ft. of interactive play space for kids and families (reservations required)

  • Indoor Walking/Running Track

Membership Benefits:

  • Indoor Aquatics Center with 25-yard lap pool, AquaClimb wall, NinjaCross System, and enclosed water slide

  • 11,000 sq. ft. Fitness Center with EGYM Strength Circuit, group exercise studios, cycle studio, and turf area

  • Sauna

  • Universal locker rooms

  • Indoor courts with three full-size basketball courts (convertible into six cross courts), three volleyball courts, and up to nine pickleball courts

  • Action Zone Childcare (free for Charter members with family memberships; additional fees apply after November 1)

The Fishers Community Center opens its doors November 1, offering families, fitness enthusiasts, and residents of all ages a new hub for recreation and wellness.

For more details on the Fishers Community Center, and membership details, use this link.

Below are photos snapped during the tour of the Center.

Continue reading Fishers Community Center Set to Open November 1

HSE Schools redistricting process speeds-up in October

 

Timeline for redistricting process

You haven’t heard much about the Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) Schools redistricting process in recent weeks because most of the work since mid-August has taken place behind the scenes. The district hired Woolpert, a consulting firm it has worked with before, to guide the process.

According to the timeline presented to the school board in August, focus groups met throughout September with Woolpert, which has been developing potential boundary line options.

As October begins, community meetings will be held to present those options and gather public input. Later in October and into early November, Woolpert will review feedback from those sessions and refine its proposals.

The firm is expected to prepare a final recommendation by December, giving the school board a plan to consider before the end of the year.

I have covered many redistricting decisions made by many HSE school boards over the past 13 years. Redistricting decisions are often emotional for families, as they can mean students moving to new school buildings, working with different teachers and administrators, and adjusting to changes in social circles.

Superintendent Patrick Mapes also emphasized at a recent board meeting that redistricting carries financial implications. With major changes to Indiana’s school funding formula enacted by the General Assembly, he said the process will play a key role in ensuring HSE uses its facilities efficiently.

The most difficult part of the process lies ahead, with the board’s decision likely coming in December. By the end of 2025, parents should know which school buildings their children will attend for the 2026–2027 school year.

HSE Schools has a Web site devoted to this redistricting process and it can be accessed using this link.

Why this site looks different

I’m now in my 13th year of writing this local Fishers news blog, a project that has always been mostly volunteer work for me. While I’ve experimented with a small amount of advertising in recent years, it never generated much revenue.

Running a site like this does come with some costs, even when it’s managed by just one person. Until now, I’ve simply covered those expenses myself as part of my commitment to providing this community resource.

You may have noticed more ads appearing on the site lately. If you find them intrusive, I apologize. But I’ve reached a point where I need a modest revenue stream to help cover the basics and hopefully make improvements in the future.

That’s why you’ll now see ads throughout LarryInFishers.com. My goal is simple: to sustain this service so I can continue keeping you informed. And someday, if there’s support for it, perhaps someone else will carry it forward when I step aside.

Thank you for being a reader and for supporting local news. If the ads bother you, feel free to scroll past them. But if you choose to click, know that it helps keep this blog going.

Fishers Unveils Full Lineup of Fall Events

The City of Fishers and Fishers Parks are rolling out a packed calendar of fall events for all ages, featuring seasonal favorites alongside new attractions and community traditions.

Returning events include Glow in the Park, Boo Bash, and the annual Fall Festival at the Fishers AgriPark, Strengthened by IU Health. Conner Prairie’s Headless Horseman also makes its return throughout October.

New this year are expanded trail connections across the city, the debut of the Fishers Community Center, and special events such as Indy Fuel Opening Night at the Fishers Event Center.

Highlights of the 2025 fall lineup include:

  • Final Day of the Fishers Farmers Market: Saturday, Sept. 27, 8 a.m.–noon, NPD AMP.

  • Glow in the Park: Sept. 26 (21+ Night) and Sept. 27 (Family Night), NPD AMP.

  • City Recycling Day: Saturday, Sept. 27, 8 a.m.–1 p.m., Billericay Park.

  • Fishers Police Department Open House: Tuesday, Sept. 30, 5–7 p.m.

  • Conner Prairie’s Headless Horseman: Oct. 2–26, Thursdays through Sundays.

  • Fishers AgriPark Fall Festival: Oct. 4–5.

  • Fishers AgriPark Campouts: Oct. 10–12.

  • Fall Break Camp: Oct. 13–17, Holland Park.

  • Indy Fuel Opening Night: Friday, Oct. 17, Fishers Event Center.

  • Boo Bash: Saturday, Oct. 25, 10 a.m.–2 p.m., NPD AMP.

  • Official Trick-or-Treating Hours: Friday, Oct. 31, 5:30–8 p.m.

  • Fishers Community Center Grand Opening: Saturday, Nov. 1, 10 a.m.–noon.

  • Veterans Day Ceremony: Tuesday, Nov. 11, 11 a.m., Fishers Municipal Center.

The season also includes art classes at the Fishers Art Center, continued access to Geist Waterfront Park during non-swim months, and volunteer opportunities through the city’s Waterway Steward program.

For more details and registration links, visit FishersParks.com or FishersIN.gov.

Hamilton County Judges Bring Constitution Lessons Into Classrooms

Hamilton County judges visited schools across the county this month to help students learn about the United States Constitution in connection with Constitution Day.

Constitution Day, observed September 17, marks the signing of the nation’s founding document in 1787. The Indiana Supreme Court encourages judges and attorneys to use the occasion as an opportunity for civic education.

Newly appointed Magistrate Judge Sarah Shields spent time in classrooms on September 15 and 16. She first visited a kindergarten class at Geist Elementary School, where she introduced students—including her own son—to the role of judges and magistrates. The following day, she read to preschoolers at LeafSpring School in Fishers, including her daughter.

“The Constitution can feel big and complicated, but even young kids understand the idea of rules and fairness,” Shields said. “It was fun to show them that judges are here to help with that.”

On September 16, Commissioner Christopher Barrows spoke to more than 800 eighth-grade social studies students at Westfield Middle School.

“Eighth grade is the perfect age to start connecting the dots between history and real life,” Barrows said. “The students had great questions, and you could tell they were really thinking about how the Constitution applies to their lives.”

Superior Court Judge David Najjar visited Geist Montessori Academy on September 22, where he guided third- and fourth-grade students through a mock trial of Goldilocks vs. The Three Bears. Students acted as jurors, attorneys, a bailiff, and a court reporter.

“When students get to be the jurors or attorneys, it clicks for them that the Constitution is about real people making real decisions,” Najjar said. “That hands-on experience sticks with them in a way a textbook never could.”

HSE Teachers Reach Settlement on Labor Complaint, Contract Talks Continue

                                     Craig Frawley

The Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) Education Association (HSEA) spent 10 hours at the bargaining table with district administrators this week, producing both progress and new challenges.

Teachers gathered in a school parking lot ahead of Wednesday night’s HSE School Board meeting to hear an update from their bargaining team. The news was mixed.

On the positive side, the union and district resolved a long-standing Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) complaint, an agreement announced the evening before the gathering.

“Glad that the ULP has been settled,” said Craig Frawley, speaking on behalf of the teachers’ bargaining team. “We are hopeful that central office stays true to their word that they are willing to work with us moving forward.”

But Frawley said the district’s opening proposal for a new one-year contract fell short. He described it as “not a tenable situation.”

According to Frawley, the administration’s plan calls for higher health insurance premiums and an increase in the out-of-pocket maximum, with no corresponding salary increase. “That means that every teacher in the district would take home less money,” he said.

If that remains the case, Frawley added, “something else has to be given back to us.”

While Indiana law does not allow teacher time to be directly negotiated, Frawley said the union intends to push for contract language that addresses workload concerns.

“Teachers need time back,” he emphasized, noting that the union’s counterproposal—expected to be delivered to administrators Thursday—will take a “creative” approach to that issue.

“We have to be creative,” Frawley said. “And we are going to ask central office to be creative as well.”

The next bargaining session is scheduled for Monday.

HSE Schools Submits $340.9 Million Budget Proposal

The Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) School District has submitted its proposed 2026 budget to the Indiana Department of Local Government Finance (DLGF), but district officials caution that the numbers are preliminary.

At a budget work session Wednesday night, Chief Financial Officer Tim Brown explained that the figures sent to the state are intentionally on the high side. By law, the DLGF can lower requested amounts but has no authority to raise them.

The proposed budget for 2026 across all funds totals $340.9 million, up from $326.3 million in 2025.

Enrollment Trends a Concern

State funding is tied largely to student enrollment, and current numbers show HSE’s total student population at 20,313—below the demographer’s most recent forecast. Brown highlighted an enrollment imbalance as a long-term concern: about 1,200 kindergarteners compared to 1,800 seniors.

To address declining enrollment, HSE has allowed families from outside district boundaries to apply for admission. Seventy-nine students enrolled this year through that program. Superintendent Patrick Mapes said the district plans to extend the application deadline in future years after some families expressed interest too late.

Local Revenue and Spending Pressures

Brown said he expects a small increase in the 2026 property tax rate—less than one cent. Local property taxes cover expenses such as operations, facilities, debt service, and transportation.

The district also plans to draw down cash balances to help fund the 2026 budget, a practice Brown warned is not sustainable.

Additional financial pressures include:

  • Teacher Retirement Fund: A state-mandated $600,000 contribution, which Brown described as a “curveball.”

  • Health Care Costs: An anticipated $4.4 million increase that will affect both the district and employees. Final details will be shaped through contract negotiations with the teachers’ association.

Looking for Savings

Mapes stressed that administrators are examining cost-saving measures that avoid direct impact on classrooms. He pointed to the ongoing redistricting process as one such effort. A proposed redistricting map is expected to go before the school board before the end of this year.

You can review Tim Brown’s entire presentation to the school board at this link.

HSE Schools Preparing 2026 Referendum Amid State Tax Law Changes

School board reviews the 2026 budget presentation

The Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) School Board is preparing to ask voters to approve another operating referendum during the 2026 general election. Superintendent Patrick Mapes made the recommendation at Wednesday night’s board meeting, held to review the district’s 2026 budget.

“We cannot wait, and now they’ve [the state legislature] changed the law—you can only do a referendum on a general election year, either ’26, ’28, or ’30,” Mapes told board members. “The loss that we have, we cannot continue having enough money to actually operate the school district.”

While the district’s gross assessed property valuation is expected to rise in the coming years, state lawmakers have enacted larger deductions through 2031 that reduce the net assessed valuation. Because tax revenue is based on that lower net figure, HSE will collect less money even at the same referendum tax rate.

The district’s current referendum rate is $0.1995, which will generate just under $30 million in 2026—most of it used to fund teacher salaries. Under current law, however, revenue from the referendum fund will begin to decline as the expanded deductions take effect.

Mapes also said county officials initially misapplied the new law when providing assessed valuation numbers to local governments, and corrected figures now show that HSE must seek voter approval for a new referendum in 2026.

HSE is not alone. Mapes expects other Hamilton County school districts will also place referendums on the 2026 ballot in response to the property tax changes.

“Now we’re going to have to ask for a higher rate, but we will not use that highest level of rate until the last year of the referendum,” Mapes explained. He offered an example of requesting voter approval for a 40-cent rate, while initially levying only 22 cents, then possibly 25 cents the following year, as deductions continue to increase.

“That will be a big education piece for everyone because it’s no longer just a fixed tax rate,” Mapes said.

District staff will now begin drafting a formal proposal. The school board will make the final decision on whether to place the referendum on the ballot and what rate to request.

The current referendum rate was approved by voters in 2023, when state law allowed a school referendum to be placed on the ballot in an odd-numbered election year.  It went into effect in 2024.