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Local organizations receive $64K in arts grants

Columbus Indiana Philharmonic Music Director David Bowden leads the orchestra in a warm up before the annual Salute concert next to the Bartholomew County Memorial for Veterans in Columbus, Ind., Friday, May 24, 2019. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

The Indiana Arts Commission has awarded 10 local organizations and entities, ranging from orchestras to cultural festivals, grants totaling more than $64,000 for the 2020 fiscal year.

The Columbus Indiana Philharmonic, with an annual budget of $1 million, landed the largest amount with $16,876, to be used as part of its general operating budget. Margaret Powers, Philharmonic executive director, said the funds are significant not only in dollars, but in acknowledging the challenge of arts-related fiscal health.

“It’s a recognition that arts organizations sometimes have a difficult task raising money for general operating expenses,” Powers said.

She pointed out that orchestral concert ticket sales account for only about 25 percent of the organization’s operating expense.

The professional orchestra’s budget and funding story is significant, especially at a time when many orchestras have struggled or disbanded.

The Columbus Area Arts Council will receive $11,042, which goes toward general operating expenses and general program support, according to Kathryn Armstrong, arts council executive director.

“One of the things we particularly appreciate about our partnership with the state (agency) is its effort in bringing more awareness that we’re a state filled with strong interdisciplinary arts programs with very creative people making Indiana even more interesting,” Armstrong said.

Our Hospice of South Central Indiana will use its $5,000 grant partly for fees for performers for its Broadway memories concert it successfully launched last summer to help patients with dementia via the national Music & Memory program. The 2019 concert is scheduled in September.

According to the arts commission, the Bartholomew County Public Library will use its $2,000 grant related to expenses for two art classes in conjunction with its 50th anniversary celebration of the Cleo Rogers Memorial Library building that is a part of the Bartholomew County Public Library.

In one class, participants will make fabric dolls in honor of late librarian Cleo Rogers. In another, participants will sketch the building and its surroundings.

Other agencies and their grant totals are:

Dancers Studio Inc., $7,356

Columbus Symphony Orchestra, $6,383

Columbus Scottish Festival. $5,000

Ethnic Expo, $5,000

Columbus City Band, $5,000

Ivy Tech Community College, $500

Lewis Ricci, a former executive director of the Columbus Area Arts Council, is executive director of the Indiana Arts Commission.

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To view the complete listing of organizations statewide that received grants from the Indiana Arts Commission, go online at in.gov/arts/2337.htm.

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Multiple hepatitis A clinics planned in county

Bartholomew County and state health officials have planned several hepatitis A vaccination clinics across the county as they continue their efforts to combat an outbreak of the disease.

On Friday, the Indiana State Department of Health will offer a hepatitis A vaccination clinic from 9 a.m. to noon at Love Chapel Food Pantry, located at 311 Center St. in Columbus.

On Tuesday, state health officials will conduct another clinic from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Bartholomew County Public Library, at 536 Fifth St. in Columbus.

State and county health officials will then team to provide three days of clinics July 9-11 at the Bartholomew County 4-H Fair.

“We’re trying to offer as many opportunities to be able to reach as many people as possible,” said Amanda Organist, director of nursing at the Bartholomew County Health Department.

Hepatitis A is a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable viral liver infection that can cause loss of appetite, nausea, tiredness, fever, stomach pain, brown-colored urine and light-colored stools.

The virus spreads when a person unknowingly ingests the virus from objects, food or drinks contaminated with infected fecal matter. This often happens when an infected person fails to wash his or her hands adequately after using the bathroom or engages in behaviors that increase the risk of infection, the health department said.

The series of vaccination clinics come as federal, state and local health officials scramble to contain a major outbreak of hepatitis A that has hit 22 states, including Indiana, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

On Monday morning, 24 people were vaccinated at a clinic offered by state health officials at the Love Chapel Food Pantry, Organist said.

A total of 2,940 hepatitis A vaccines have been administered in Bartholomew County since Jan. 1, 2018, according to the Indiana State Department of Health.

As of Wednesday, Bartholomew County health officials had investigated 58 potential cases of the disease so far this year, but haven’t yet confirmed if all those cases are hepatitis A.

As of June 7, Bartholomew County had 49 confirmed cases of the disease, according to figures from the Bartholomew County Health Department, Organist said. Typically, the county sees one to two cases per year, health officials said.

Indiana has seen 1,642 cases of the disease since the outbreak started in the state in November 2017 — 98 more cases than on June 7 and the sixth most in the country. Before the outbreak, the state had previously averaged about 20 cases of hepatitis A per year, according to the Indiana State Department of Health.

So far, four people have died and 834 have been hospitalized in Indiana due to the disease, according to state figures. No deaths in Bartholomew County have been attributed to hepatitis A, Organist said.

Kentucky and Ohio have seen the most cases of any state, accounting for roughly 32 percent of the 20,512 cases of hepatitis A across the country since CDC officials identified the outbreak. A total of 68 people have died from the disease in Kentucky and Ohio.

Currently, Bartholomew County has 487 doses of the vaccine in stock and can order more if needed, Organist said.

“There’s no shortage,” she said. “We’re able to get vaccines the next day if we need it.”

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A list of upcoming hepatitis A vaccination clinics in Bartholomew County:

Friday: 9 a.m. to noon at Love Chapel Food Pantry, 311 Center St., Columbus.

Tuesday: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Bartholomew County Public Library, 536 Fifth St., Columbus. Free hot dogs.

July 9: 5 to 9 p.m. at the Bartholomew County 4-H Fair, 750 W. County Road 200S, at the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department tent.

July 10: noon to 9 p.m. at the Bartholomew County 4-H Fair, 750 W. County Road 200S, at the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department tent.

July 11: 5 to 9 p.m. at the Bartholomew County 4-H Fair, 750 W. County Road 200S, at the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department tent.

The clinics on Friday and Tuesday also include free HIV and hepatitis C screenings.

Call the Bartholomew County Health Department at 812-379-1555, option 1, for more information.

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County taking action to reduce youth suicides

St. Peter's Lutheran School Hope Squad members Trevor, left, and Tyler Ernst wait to greet students at the start of the school day at St. Peter's Lutheran School in Columbus, Ind., Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2018. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

COLUMBUS, Ind. —  In 2019, an average of 35 percent of Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. students in Grades 6-12 reported feeling sad or hopeless for two or more weeks in a row — a nearly 5% increase since 2017, according to the Indiana Youth Survey.

This year, about 17% of BCSC students in Grades 6-12 reported that they had considered suicide at least once. Just over 14% of students in Grades 6-12 said they made a plan about suicide once in their life.

BCSC said 2018-19 was the first school year since 2008 when it did not have a youth suicide in its district.

Members of the Columbus community are stepping up to the plate to ensure no more lives are lost to suicide. Through peer mentoring, trauma-informed care, counseling programs and even a national initiative called Hope Squad, people of all ages across Columbus are starting the conversation.

Please read Friday’s edition of The Republic for more details.

ASAP Hub on track for August opening

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Bartholomew County residents can access a new addiction recovery resource center as soon as Aug. 1 if all goes according to plan, said Nathan Walsh, manager of the Alliance for Substance Abuse Progress Hub.

The county alliance, commonly referred to as ASAP Inc., is an organization formed to provide prevention and recovery services to people affected by the opioid crisis in Bartholomew County.

Since December 2018, the ASAP board of directors has worked to set up the hub, a physical location where people seeking treatment will find referrals and assistance in recovering from addiction. At the board’s Wednesday meeting, Walsh offered an update on the current standing of the facility at Doug Otto Center near downtown Columbus.

Please read Friday’s edition of The Republic for more details.

Former CRH leader named ASAP executive director

Doug Leonard

Doug Leonard, former president and CEO of Columbus Regional Health and the Indiana Hospital Association, will take the reins of Bartholomew County’s Alliance for Substance Abuse Progress beginning July 8.

Leonard will succeed interim executive director Jeff Jones, who will remain on in an advisory capacity during the transition. The ASAP board of directors named Leonard executive director on Wednesday.

“Doug brings vast experience in the health care field, as well as exceptional leadership capabilities, and will be a great asset for many years to come,” said Mark Stewart, president of the ASAP board of directors and United Way of Bartholomew County.

Leonard served as the president and CEO of Columbus Regional Health from 1997 to 2007 after 20 years in various roles at Columbus Regional Hospital. He was named president of the Indiana Hospital Association in 2007 and retired from that role in 2017.

“With ASAP Inc. now established as an ongoing not-for-profit organization, Doug’s leadership experience and commitment to our community makes him a perfect match for this role,” Jones said. “I know that ASAP will be in great hands under Doug.”

Leonard said he started seeing material about ASAP in 2017 and was impressed by its organization and roots.

“It was really a more complete and thoughtful model than I had seen from other parts of the state who were trying to tackle this issue,” Leonard said. “I actually began using the model that Columbus developed as a recommended way for hospitals in the association to go about handling the opioid epidemic.”

When he was approached by Columbus Mayor Jim Lienhoop and Jones about Jones’ upcoming departure and the vacancy, Leonard said he knew this was a worthwhile opportunity that had “real importance and real meaning to the city.”

Leonard said his first goal is to learn a lot.

“I have been only an observer from the outside,” Leonard said. “While I think I can learn really quickly, I have not been a part of the group that has put this great structure together.”

One area he hopes to develop is how the city measures success when it comes to true recovery. For example, Leonard said although the number of prescribed opiates has dramatically decreased, he wonders how many of those people who are no longer receiving prescription drugs have turned to heroin, methamphetamine or something else.

“While the prescriptions have dropped, it doesn’t necessarily mean success and solving the addiction problem,” Leonard said.

“If we could get to the point where we talk about lives saved from addiction, families not broken up because of addiction, people not jailed because of addiction — all those would be great, but recovery is the area we need to focus on most. How do you measure the number of people who successfully left the criminal justice system or found their way to treatment?”

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Doug Leonard

Hometown: South Bend, Indiana

Current residency: Columbus

Career: Columbus Regional Health (30 years), Indiana Hospital Association (10 years)

Education: Indiana University Northwest; IUPUI

Family: Laura, wife; daughter, Annie; son, Ben; son-in-law, Jon; daughter-in-law, Mollie

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The Alliance for Substance Abuse Progress in Bartholomew County was launched in April 2017 to develop a community-wide response to the opioid crisis.

The ASAP leadership team was established and Jeff Jones, a retired Cummins Inc. executive, volunteered as ASAP executive director. A group of local health care and criminal justice system executives agreed to a two-year commitment to lead action teams to identify gaps in the substance abuse treatment system and to prioritize and implement solutions.

In October 2017, ASAP announced its strategy to address opioid addiction and substance abuse based on prevention, intervention, treatment and recovery.

To learn more, visit asapbc.org.

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Otter Creek hosting local qualifier for AJGA event

A local qualifier for next week’s American Junior Golf Association Circle K Junior Championship hosted by Otter Creek will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday at Otter Creek.

The cost for the qualifier is $25. Boys or girls ages 14 to 18 who have not started college can call the pro shop to get their name on the list to play and can sign up at the course on Saturday morning.

One boy and one girl from Saturday’s qualifier will earn the right to play in the tournament, which is Tuesday through July 4 at Otter Creek. Incoming juniors Kody Reynolds of Columbus East and Nathaly Munnicha of Columbus North are the locals who already are entered in next week’s tournament.

The regular AJGA Tournament qualifier is on Sunday morning, and the field for that is full.

There will be a junior golf clinic at 1 p.m. Monday. Kids can register at 12:30 p.m. and will receive a hot dog, chips and Polar Pop from Circle K.

Because of an influx of donations, local organizers have added Foundation For Youth as a second charitable partner. The First Tee remains as a charitable partner.

Rookie Rewards / North freshman is Republic Girls Tennis Player of the Year

Columbus North freshman Ashlie Wilson is The Republic Girls Tennis Player of the Year. She is pictured at Columbus North High School in Columbus, Ind., Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

From the day Ashlie Wilson entered high school, Columbus North tennis coach Kendal Hammel knew exactly where she would be playing.

No. 1 singles.

Wilson stepped into the top singles spot in the Bull Dogs’ season opener this spring and was there to stay. She led North to the state tournament as a freshman and is The Republic Girls Tennis Player of the Year.

"I’ve been playing with all the girls on the varsity team for awhile now, so I kind of knew, but it all depended on what Kendal wanted to do," Wilson said. "The first match, I was a little bit nervous, but the whole team helped me with cheering and watching me, and with my tournament experience, it helped me not be nervous."

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A veteran of junior tennis tournaments, Wilson has led the Indiana Smash team to the Junior Team Tennis nationals the past two years. Because of that, Hammel had no hesitation putting her at No. 1 singles.

"We knew that was going to happen right off the bat," Hammel said. "She handled that position really well. Not all the matches were competitive for her, and we worked on things that she needed to work on to get ready for the better matches."

Wilson went 22-5 this season. Most of the matches that she lost were close matches.

"She was competitive in all her losses," Hammel said. "She was right there with everybody. She did exactly what she knew she could do."

One of Wilson’s losses came in three sets in the state quarterfinals against Carmel’s Sydney Morris. However, Wilson beat Morris in three sets during the regular season.

Two of Wilson’s losses came to Evansville Memorial freshman Ellie Myers. The Bull Dogs lost to Memorial 3-2 early in the season, but beat the Tigers 3-2 in the semistate to reach the state tournament.

"The highlight of my year was probably at semistate when we found out we made it to state because we pulled through in that hard match against Evansville Memorial even though we lost to them in the regular season," Wilson said. "I think that everyone pulled through in their spot, so it helped us get far."

Hammel said Wilson is a well-rounded player.

"She is a big hitter, and she is very versatile in hitting all kinds of shots," Hammel said. "She can hit big groundstrokes. She can hit the loopy groundstrokes. She can slice and volley. She’s not one-dimensional. She can do a lot of different things, and she’s a fighter. She pushes herself to get better."

This week, Wilson played in a qualifier for the Midwest Closed Championship at North Central. In July, she plans to play in the Clay Court Nationals, the Midwest Open Girls 18 Championship in Columbus and the Junior Team Tennis regional tournament.

Wilson is happy with the way her freshman high school season went.

"I think that this year was really successful for me," Wilson said. "I think that it was a good start to my high school season, and I think I will be able to do better in the next years. I know it will be hard being a sophomore, but the rest of my high school career, I would like to make it to state and hopefully compete for a state title."

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The Republic All-Area Girls Tennis Team:

Ashlie Wilson, Columbus North: The freshman went 22-5 at No. 1 singles.

Eva Chevalier, Columbus North: The junior went 23-4 at No. 2 singles.

Shweta Srinivasan, Columbus North: The senior went 9-6 at No. 3 singles, 4-1 at No. 1 doubles and 3-2 at No. 2 doubles.

Ali Bergman, Columbus North: The junior went 7-8 at No. 1 doubles and 6-2 at No. 2 doubles.

Jaline Tay, Columbus North: The sophomore went 14-12 at No. 1 doubles and 1-0 at No. 2 doubles.

Servane Cloteaux, Columbus North: The senior went 18-1 at No. 2 doubles and 3-4 at No. 1 doubles.

Tiffany Fu, Columbus North: The freshman went 15-1 at No. 2 doubles, 9-0 at No. 3 singles and 0-1 at No. 1 doubles.

Kathryn Hodzen, Columbus East: The junior went 13-5 at No. 1 singles and 1-0 at No. 1 doubles.

Megna Chari, Columbus East: The senior went 15-3 at No. 2 singles and 1-0 at No. 1 doubles.

Callie Wilder, Jennings County: The senior went 12-8 at No. 1 doubles.

Liz Ertel, Jennings County: The sophomore went 10-6 between No. 1 doubles and No. 2 doubles.

Honorable mention

Brown County: Baelyn Koester. Columbus East: Cristina Marco, Ayano Nomura, Louna Prince. Edinburgh: Haley Jones. Hauser: Carly Archer, Maddy Archer, Abby Johnson, Melanie Taylor. Jennings County: Reagan Brown, Ellie Hearne.

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Air Quality Action Day issued for Bartholomew County

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Bartholomew County is among the central and southeast Indiana counties for which the Indiana Department of Environmental Management has issued an Air Quality Action Day on Friday, and is forecasting high ozone levels.

Brown, Johnson, Monroe, Shelby and Jackson are neighboring counties for which alerts were issued.

Anyone sensitive to changes in air quality may be affected when ozone levels are high. Children, the elderly and anyone with heart or lung conditions should reduce or avoid exertion and heavy work outdoors, IDEM said.

Brown County State Park’s campground, lodge reopen

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BROWN COUNTY — The campgrounds, cabins and Abe Martin Lodge have reopened at Brown County State Park, according to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources.

Modern restrooms and drinking fountains are open. The park’s public pool was expected to open at noon on its regular schedule. Abe Martin Lodge’s Little Gem restaurant was expected to resume its normal schedules for lunch and dinner.

The horsemen’s campground is open, but horse trails are still being assessed for storm damage. Mountain bike trails remain closed and are being assessed as well. Some hiking trails remain closed due to flooding damage to boardwalks and staircases.

Campsites and inn rooms are available for this weekend, and the inn’s aquatic center will be open.

Abe Martin Lodge, pools, modern restrooms, and drinking fountains have been closed since June 17 due to the amount of sediment that washed into Ogle Lake along with torrential rains. Ogle Lake is the park’s water supply, and sediment impacted the filters in the water treatment facility.

Traffic stop yields 2 arrests, recovery of stolen car

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Columbus Police Department officers patrolling along Cottage Avenue recovered a stolen vehicle from Rush County and arrested the car’s two occupants.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Wednesday, a CPD officer observed a blue Chevy Camaro driving slowly in front of him in the 1900 block of Cottage Avenue. The officer checked the car’s license plate and determined that the vehicle was recently stolen from Rush County.

Police stopped the vehicle and arrested the driver, Timothy E. Barrow, 57, and his passenger, Kristi M. Schofner, 43, both of Rushville. Officers also confirmed a warrant for Schofner’s arrest.

Please read Friday’s edition of The Republic for more details.