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Fred Swift: Ivy Tech after five years proves a success for county

by

Fred Swift

Hamilton County Reporter

(NOTE: This is a commentary written by Fred Swift of the Hamilton County Reporter. The views expressed are those of Fred Swift and do not necessarily reflect the views of LarryInFishers.com.  This opinion piece is posted here as part of a partnership between the Reporter and LarryInFishers.com)

It hardly seems possible that Noblesville’s Ivy Tech is in its sixth year of operation. The vocational college opened in August of 2014 in facilities at 300 N. 17th St., which originally housed Noblesville High School.

Officially known as Ivy Tech College – Hamilton County, it is one of 30 Ivy Tech campuses in Indiana, and it’s here because of the foresight of Noblesville and Hamilton County leaders and no doubt some help from local state legislators.

City and county government invested about $18 million to buy and re-fit the building for its current use as an institution of higher learning. Daniel Lee Clark, vice chancellor in the state Ivy Tech system, heads operations locally.

The college’s two-year program offers associate degrees in courses designed to prepare students for entry into the county’s economic and growth sectors. That includes such subjects as building construction and automotive technology as well as general studies. Credits can be transferred to state universities.

A big advantage is the substantially lower cost of tuition than found at a major university campus.

Enrollment at Ivy Tech in Noblesville reached 2,722 by the end of 2018. Most students are from Hamilton County, but nearby residents are accepted. Clark says that figure is not capacity, and larger numbers can be accommodated. Registration for the spring semester is now open. Classes begin Jan. 14.

Ivy Tech facilities are not limited to the college. The Parks Department makes use of space there, along with food bank distribution, even some high school classes.

All in all, securing Ivy Tech in Noblesville has to be considered one of the major community accomplishments of the decade.

Fishers edges out HSE for Mudsock trophy

The Fishers girls basketball team won the Mudsock game Saturday at the Tiger Den, beating Hamilton Southeastern 54-52. Freshman Olivia Smith made a buzzer-beating layin to give the Tigers the victory. (Reporter photos by Kirk Green)

Hamilton County Reporter

Fishers freshman Olivia Smith has only been playing varsity basketball for less than two months, and she has quite a few big games ahead for her high school career.

But she will never forget her first Mudsock game. Smith hit a buzzer-beating layin to give the Tigers a 54-52 win over crosstown rival Hamilton Southeastern Saturday night at the Tiger Den.

Besides the Mudsock trophy, there was quite a bit at stake in this game.  Fishers freshman Olivia Smith has only been playing varsity basketball for less than two months, and she has quite a few big games ahead for her high school career.

But she will never forget her first Mudsock game. Smith hit a buzzer-beating layin to give the Tigers a 54-52 win over crosstown rival Hamilton Southeastern Saturday night at the Tiger Den.

Besides the Mudsock trophy, there was quite a bit at stake in this game. Fishers was putting its unbeaten record on the line. Both teams were undefeated in Hoosier Crossroads Conference play coming into the contest. And both are ranked in the Class 4A coaches poll,
with Tigers fourth and the Royals sixth.

“You try and try to tell your kids, ‘Look, it’s another game,’ and you try to prepare like it’s another game,” said Fishers coach Lauren Votaw. But the coach is aware that the rivalry is a big one and she was happy to see her team get the win.

“You just love it for your kids, too,” said Votaw. “They’re so much fun to coach every single day because they come in and they buy in. And they bought into the culture and they bought in to loving each other and doing things the right way. Right now I’m just so excited for them to get to experience the fruits of their labor.”

It was a close game the entire way. Southeastern led 16-13 after the first quarter, with Jackie Maulucci scoring seven points. The Tigers’ Katie Burton had seven points as well.
The Royals were up 30-28 at halftime, then led 44-40 after three quarters. Kaitlynn Feagan stepped up big for Fishers in the second period, scoring nine points. The Tigers held Southeastern to eight points in the fourth quarter, overcoming an early deficit in the period to tie the game at 52-52, then Smith stepped up and made the game-winning basket.

Fishers didn’t have anyone in double digits, but had three players score nine points: Feagan, Burton and Audra Emmerson. Tamia Perryman added eight points, while Olivia Smith and her sister Hailey Smith both had seven points.

Senior Lydia Stullken had five points; she and Feagan each collected four rebounds.

“This is so awesome,” said Stullken. “So happy we all stuck together, pulled
it out in the end.”

“We really only had yesterday morning to prepare fully, because we had a game on Thursday,” said Stullken. “We really locked in, we stepped it up and we did it.”

Sydney Parrish led Southeastern with a double-double of 19 points and 11 rebounds, while Maulucci finished with 15 points.

The Tigers are 4-0 in conference play and 14-0 overall, and are off until a Jan. 4 game at Fort Wayne South Side. The Royals are 4-1 in the HCC and 10-2 overall, and play this weekend at the North Central Classic, taking on Henderson County (Ky.) on Friday and Springboro (Ohio) on Saturday.

 

Hamilton Southeastern’s Jackie Maulucci scored 15 points for the Royals.

 

Nearly $1.7 million bid approved to build roundabout at Ford Road and 126th Street

The City of Fishers will begin work on a new roundabout at 126th Street and Ford Road, just west of State Road 37, in March of 2020, following the approval of a $1.69 million bid from Rieth-Riley Construction.  According to the city engineering department, the work on the roundabout should begin at roughly the same time as work begins in earnest to reconstruct the 126th Street interchange with State Road 37.

The roundabout is projected to be complete by early July of next year.

Property owners adjacent to the 126th Street intersection with Ford Road have hired a police officer to direct traffic during busy traffic times for a number of years, just to allow traffic to move in that area.  Officials say access for local residents and businesses in the area will continue during the construction period.

The bid was approved by the Fishers Board of Public Works and Safety at a Friday morning meeting.

A close call for a Fishers family, and some advice from the fire department

You can see the sled’s path in the snow (Photo provided by Fishers Fire Dept)

Sledding is a favorite activity this time of year with the amount of snow we have on the ground in and around Fishers.  The Fishers Fire Department is using this Saturday morning experience of one Fishers family as a lesson in safety.

According to a Facebook post from local firefighters, a 4-year-old child sat down on a sled at the top of an incline and the child began sledding down the hill before the parents could react.  The sled carried her onto a retention pond.  According to the Fishers Fire Department, the ice did not crack.

The parents did the right thing by not trying to walk onto the ice, but called fire officials, who arrived and safely brought the 4-year-old back to safe ground.  “Firefighters reported hearing the ice “pop” as the rescuers weight was placed on the ice but again, luck held that the ice could support the weight,” the Facebook posting said.

The fire department is crediting the parents for doing the right thing and not trying to walk on the ice themselves.

Fire officials have this advice for situations such as this.  “As temperatures rise over the next few days, the ice likely won’t continue to support weight. Please keep your children away from retention ponds. The risk is just too high.”

Tigers win Mudsock game in OT

Hamilton Southeastern’s Mabor Majak (50) and Fishers’ Jeffrey Simmons (33) had dominant games for their teams, with Majak getting a doubledouble of 16 rebounds and 10 points, and Simmons leading all scorers with 22 points. Also pictured for the Royals is John McCall (32). (Reporter Photo by Kirk Green)

by

Richie Hall

Sports Editor 

Hamilton County Reporter

Once again, the annual Mudsock boys basketball game lived up to the occasion.

Fishers held off a fourth-quarter comeback by Hamilton Southeastern, then made its own comeback in overtime to score its second consecutive Mudsock trophy. The Class 4A No. 8 Tigers won 54-51 Friday at the Royals’ gym, keeping their record unbeaten at 7-0.

It was the second overtime game of the evening, as the Fishers junior varsity team won its game 42-39, also needing an extra period. That was followed by a Unified game between the Tigers and Southeastern, so it was a night filled with exciting basketball from start to finish.

The Royals provided the excitement in the fourth quarter, as they rallied from a 38-28 deficit to force overtime. John McCall started the run by scoring on a floater, then Elliott Robinson made two free throws to cut the Fishers lead to 38-32.

The Tigers still led 41-37 with under four minutes left. HSE’s Mabor Majak drained a pair of free throws, then tied the game on a layin. Fishers responded when
Justin Long hit a 3-pointer to get the Tigers back on top, 44-41.

Vinny Buccilla’s basket brought the Royals back within one, then Charlie Smith extended the lead to two, 45-43, with a free throw at the 1:28 mark.

That would be the last point until Majak scored on a rebound basket with under 10
seconds left to tie the game at 45-45.

Southeastern was in control during the first part of the OT, with Sam Jacobs
and Buccilla both making layins and Majak hitting a free throw to put the Royals
up 50-45 halfway through the period.

But Fishers would finish the game on a 9-1 run. Sophomore Jeffrey Simmons
threw in a 3 to cut HSE’s lead to two, then Simmons converted a traditional threepoint play to give the Tigers a 51-50 lead.

Buccilla tied the game with a free throw, but Charlie Smith put Fishers in front for
good with a layin. The Tigers held the lead from that point forward. Dominic
Castellani finished it off with a free throw.

“I thought our guys, in the moments where we were back against the wall, they made the play they needed to make,” said Tigers coach Matt Moore. “Justin hits a big 3, Dom gets a big steal, Isaac (Farah) gets a steal, Jeff hit some shots. It just shows the character and the poise that these guys have and that’s something that is fun about them. You’re never down and you’re never out.”

Fishers led 9-8 after the first quarter and 22-17 at halftime, with Simmons scoring nine first half points. The Royals took a 24-22 lead with 4:55 left in the third quarter after Buccilla drained a 3-pointer. But Simmons tied the game with a layin, and that started a 16-6 run
that lasted into the fourth period.

Simmons scored 22 points to lead all scorers, with Smith adding 12 points.
Both players collected seven rebounds as well. Isaac Farah handed out four assists.

Buccilla led Southeastern with 17 points, while Majak earned a double-double of 16 rebounds and 10 points. Robinson had two blocked shots.

“They won the toughness battle the first three quarters,” said Royals coach Brian Satterfield. “In the fourth quarter, we won the toughness battle and it allowed us to get back in the game and get into overtime.” But the coach said his team “had too many errors and you got to give them credit.”

The undefeated Tigers are off until next Friday (Dec. 27) when they play at
the Bedford North Lawrence tournament.

Southeastern is 3-4 and will next play on Monday, Dec. 30 when it hosts Pendleton
Heights.

Mudsock basketball game packs HSE Royal Gym

The Fishers Tigers pose for a photo with the Mudsock Trophy

A Mudsock game is always more than a sporting event, it is a community celebration.  Unfortunately, at the end of the game, someone has to lose and their celebration ends.  But even with that, most people in and around Fishers enjoy taking in the Mudsock contest, be it football or basketball.

The HSE High School gym was filled to capacity with Tiger and Royal fans Friday night.  The basketball game itself was one of the best I have seen in some. time.  Both teams had their surges during the game, but it ended in a 45-45 tie, so an overtime period was tacked-on to determine the winner.  The Tigers held on for a hard-fought 54-51 win.

Several local TV stations were on hand for live broadcasts during local newscasts.  Lots of other sports media paid a visit to the HSE gym.

Here are a few photos from the 2019 boys basketball Mudsock Game:

Continue reading Mudsock basketball game packs HSE Royal Gym

Commissioners amend sign ordinance

Hamilton County Reporter

The County Commissioners have approved an amended sign ordinance that should help eliminate confusion between similar ordinances in Hamilton County’s cities and towns.

In a unanimous vote, the commissioners passed Amended Ordinance No. 11-25-19-A at the Dec. 19 meeting. The amended proposal prohibits the placement of all non-public safety signs within public rights-of-way in the unincorporated areas of Hamilton County, along roads and bridges maintained by Hamilton County, and on land owned by the county.

“When it comes right down to it, this is really a matter of safety,” says Steve Dillinger, President of the Commissioners. “Poorly placed signs increase visual clutter, distract drivers, and make it difficult to obey street and traffic signs.”

Hamilton County streets are defined in the new ordinance as all public streets within the unincorporated area of Hamilton County, 146th Street east from the Boone County line to Marilyn Road, Campus Parkway east from Marilyn Road to the Interstate 69 bridge, Olio Road from 96th Street north to, and including, the roundabout at Campus Parkway, and any bridge of over 20 feet in length located within Hamilton County other than bridges over I-69, U.S. 31, State Road 37 and Keystone Parkway.

“It can be difficult to know where the city limits begin and the county limits end,” Dillinger said. “That’s why we’ve been working with the cities to create an ordinance that will work for all of us. Fishers, Westfield and Noblesville plan to adopt similar amendments at upcoming council meetings. Carmel’s current ordinance is nearly identical to this one.”

Traffic, utility and construction signs approved by the Board of Commissioners or the Hamilton County Highway Department are not prohibited by the new ordinance, as are signs placed on private property with the consent of the property owner. Signs found to be in violation of the ordinance will be collected and taken to the Hamilton County Highway Department. They can be retrieved for $3 for each sign of six square feet or less and $15 for each sign larger than six square feet. Fees help cover the cost of trucks and crews used to collect the signs. If the signs are not collected before June 30 or Dec. 31 of each year, the signs may be destroyed.

The sign ordinance will be enforced starting Saturday, Feb. 1, 2020. Copies of the ordinance are available in the Hamilton County Auditor’s Office. A copy will also be posted at hamiltoncounty.in.gov.