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please go to www.historictraderspoint.org

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

 

<www.historictraderspoint.org>

Creamery event benefits Historic Traders Point!

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Sunday, October 26th, 2008 from 12 to 6 pm Traders Point Creamery will be hosting Oktoberfest once again. This is truly the most fabulous, fun-filled day on the farm!
Enjoy the Live Music of PolkaBoy’s 13-piece Power Band, Hayrides, Bonfires, Cow Milking, Pumpkin Patch, Face Painting, Games, Pet the Baby Calves and more. You may also sample our Award-winning Organic Dairy Products that are made right on the farm!

Traditional German Food, Beer, and Wine available for purchase, as well as Traders Point Creamery Ice Cream, Delicious Cheeses, Baked Goods, Hot Chocolate, and more! Drink local beer and enjoy Upland Brewing Co., of Bloomington, Indiana—it is delicious!
Oktoberfest is a fundraiser to protect over 7,000 acres of remaining greenspace in Traders Point Rural Historic Districts and surrounding areas.
Tickets are $8 in Advance online and $10 at the Gate. Children under 10 years free. http://www.tpforganics.com/content/view/73/200/

school board forum

Saturday, March 28th, 2009
March 22, 2008
School funding is No. 1 issuePike School Board candidates offer ideas at forumBy Robert Annisrobert.annis@indystar.com
Candidates for Pike Township School Board debated the district’s financial future during the Traders Point Association of Neighborhoods meeting Thursday.
Challengers Ricky Hence and Brownell Payne joined current board members Larry Grau, Larry Metzler and Nancy Poore in a forum attended by about 30 people at Traders Point Creamery.
Four of the five candidates will be elected May 6.
Money received the most attention because the legislature this year changed the way schools are funded and capped property taxes.
Hence and Payne suggested the board look for nontraditional funding sources, including foundations supported by Pike Township businesses. Metzler said the district aggressively seeks corporate and government grant dollars but emphasized cutting costs as well.
“Being on the board, sometimes you have to make uncomfortable decisions,” Metzler said.
Poore emphasized investing in quality products that will last over time, citing the new geothermal heating system to be installed in Eastbrook Elementary School. While the district would spend more money up front on the geothermal system, Poore estimated that money would be made up through energy savings within five to 10 years.
Payne, whose wife is a teacher at New Augusta Public Academy North, expressed concern about employee morale, noting that Pike teachers are working without a contract and that bus drivers are not allowed to vote on forming a union.
Grau countered that pay increases could force the School Board to discontinue programs and services for students.
Hence and Payne are endorsed by the drivers and the local American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees union that seeks to represent them, but said they are more than one-issue candidates. They called for more emphasis on special education and under-performing students.
“We need to take care of the least fortunate, because they’re the ones that need the most help,” Hence said.
While the incumbents stressed their experience, several audience members expressed dissatisfaction with the district’s standardized testing scores and under-performing schools. Metzler and Poore pointed to increasing numbers of students coming from Indianapolis Public Schools and those who speak English as a second language as some of the reasons why test scores have dropped.

UPDATE: IPL vs Trees

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

On March 15th, the mediation group of residents selected by Councilor Ike Randolph after the meeting with IPL at the Creamery on February 23rd met again with IPL and the Indianapolis forester along with Ike and Attorney Greg Silver. The mediation group calls ourselves Traders Point Green Preservation-TPGP). TPGP met among ourselves several times in preparation for the second meeting with IPL, and we developed our proposals for resolution of IPL’s plan for tree removal and severe trimming. Those proposals,or talking points, were distributed via e-mail within Traders Point last week. We did not expect the negotiations to conclude at the March 15th meeting and they did not. IPL wants time to consider our proposals. Ike Randolph and Attorney Greg Silver are to coordinate with IPL and city forestry to take “field trips” to the Griffin, Huler, and Stevens properties (border south 86th Street). It was tentatively scheduled to meet again the first week of April. In the meantime, Councilor Randolph got IPL to continue the tree cutting moratorium until after the next round of negotiations.
Likely, the first activity of IPL after the March 15th meeting is to have a surveyor do a survey of the 86th Street corridor. In our preparations for these negotiations, TPGP and Greg Silver studied the Huler and Stevens mortgage surveys and the plat drawing of the Silver Leaf Estates (3 properties south of 86th on Moore’s west side plus Silver Leaf Court, and Silver Ridge). Mr. Silver then had a surveyor of extensive Indianapolis experience do survey research and make a survey drawing of the Moore-86th intersection and areas east and west along 86th St. The surveyor’s results confirmed the mortgage surveys that there is no utility easement on the south side of 86th Street west from the intersection at Moore, and the right of way is only 40 feet from road center then widening to 45 feet further west. Measurements made by TPGP of the power poles on the Huler and Stevens properties show them to be violating the right of way by many feet. Furthermore, running the length of Silver Leaf Estates along the south side of 86th Street is a 15 foot planting easement intended for trees to beautify 86th. IPL violated the planting easement in 1992 when they clear cut the trees from it to put in the power poles we now have.
TPGP has incurred more expense for the fee of the surveyor, but the expense has been very worthwhile. We still are in need for covering the attorney and, now, surveyor expenses so contributions are very much sought. Thanks to those of you who have contributed already.
The last point to make on the tree issue as it currently stands is a bit of suggestion: everyone go hunt up your mortgage survey and look for right of way and easement indicators.