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Borrow, read, enjoy

The mini lending library outside of the America and Roby Anderson Community Center is providing more than free books. It is lending a place for children and adults alike to share the joy of reading and promote literacy without the worry of a closing time.

The books, for both children and adults, are stored in a barn-shaped red box under the front porch awning at the center, 421 McClure Road in Columbus.

They are available any time and for anyone in Columbus. The hope is that more children and adults become more interested in reading, said Julie Bilz, president of the State Street Area Association and an associate professor at Ivy Tech.

“My job is teaching students who want to be teachers, and I think it is essential that people know how to read, whether its for pleasure or business or any other reason you can think of,” Bilz said.

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Studies have shown that reading for just 20 minutes a day can be beneficial to children, said Brandy Walters, secretary of the Future Teachers Club at Ivy Tech.

“I believe every child should have access to books, whether they can afford them or not, because of the benefits,” Walters said.

Walters added that she hopes the library, which opened Oct. 28, gets a lot of use. Walters said she thinks that the library is so new that few people are aware of it, but from what she has seen so far excitement seems to be the most common reaction from those who learn about it.

No time limit on returning the books has been discussed currently. Center staff simply encourage borrowers to read the books at their own pace and return them upon completion, Walters said.

Most of the mini lending library’s books were donated during a recent book drive, Bilz said.

Members of the Future Teachers Club noticed that the mini library had sat empty after the center — formerly the Eastside Community Center — closed in October 2015. The club decided to have a book drive to restock the lending library.

The drive brought in about 150 books as of Oct. 31. The donations are mostly children’s fiction, but some adult fiction such as mysteries have been included. Bilz said a second book drive is a possibility next year.

However, residents can add gently used books to the library whenever they want, she added.

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What: Mini lending library

Where: Outside the America and Roby Anderson Community Center, 421 McClure Road, Columbus.

How it works: Residents can visit the library to select a book or donate a book. Borrowers can return the books once they have finished reading them and are welcome to then pick out another.

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Primed for election: After months of campaigns, time to decide

Today is Election Day, and the final opportunity for registered voters in Bartholomew County to have a say in the many important races that will be decided on the local, state and national levels.

Polls will be open 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 18 vote centers on Election Day.

Notably, Hoosiers will help choose a new president, pick a new governor, decide races for the U.S. House and Senate, elect state lawmakers and decide local races for county council, county commissioner, coroner and school board.

State and nation

Two-term President Barack Obama is prohibited by law from seeking a third term. His successor, who will be the 45th president, is expected to be either the first female president, Democratic Party nominee Hillary Clinton, or a candidate who would be one of just a handful to become president without every having previously held elected political office, Republican Party nominee Donald Trump. Either would follow the country’s first black president.

The most recent candidate elected president with no prior political experience was Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was elected the 34th president in 1952 after serving as supreme commander of Allied Forces in World War II and supreme commander of NATO. Other examples include Herbert Hoover, William Howard Taft, Ulysses S. Grant and Zachary Taylor.

A Trump victory would give Columbus a White House connection. Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, the GOP nominee for vice president, was born in Columbus, grew up in the city and is a graduate of Columbus North High School.

Pence ended his gubernatorial re-election bid in mid-July to become Trump’s running mate, ensuring that Hoosiers will elect the state’s 51st governor. That is expected to be either John Gregg, the Democratic nominee and former Indiana House speaker, or Lt. Gov. Eric Holcomb, the Republican nominee.

The presidential and gubernatorial races have been among the most hotly contested. Another is the U.S. Senate race between Republican Todd Young, who decided against seeking re-election in 9th district of the House of Representatives, and Democrat Evan Bayh, the former Indiana governor and U.S. senator. Both are vying for the seat being vacated by Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., who is retiring. Until a redistricting change in 2012, Young had represented a portion of Bartholomew County.

Local impact

On the local level, voters will elect candidates to the county’s executive and fiscal bodies, choose school board members, pick a new coroner and choose state lawmakers who represent Bartholomew County.

Seven candidates are competing for three county council at-large seats: Democrats Pam Clark, Lynne Fleming and Diane Hawes; Republicans Bill Lentz, Evelyn Pence and Matt Miller; and Libertarian Josh Brown. Lentz and Pence are incumbents.

According to Indiana law, the council is defined as the county’s fiscal body and has the final decision regarding such affairs. Among its duties are:

  • Approving annual operating budgets of all government offices and agencies
  • Establishing salaries, wages, per diem rates and other compensation for all officials and employees
  • Fixing tax rates and establishing levies on all county property to raise needed budgetary funds
  • Authorizing expenditures of county money

Bartholomew County has three commissioners. Two of the seats are up for election, but only once race is contested: Democrat Brad Woodcock is challenging Republican incumbent Rick Flohr for District 3. All registered voters can vote in that race.

According to Indiana law, the commissioners are defined as the county’s executive board, and they are elected to four-year terms. Some of their duties are:

  • Controlling, maintaining and supervising county property, including courthouses, jails and public offices
  • Supervising construction and maintenance of roads, bridges and county buildings
  • Appointing people to fill positions on boards, commissions and committees and choosing certain department heads

Other notable races this year include:

  • County coroner: Republican Clayton Nolting vs. Democrat Paula Rothrock. The winner from among the two political newcomers will replace Larry Fisher, who did not seek re-election.
  • Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. Board: Incumbent Polly Verbanic vs. James Persinger for District 3, incumbent Pat Bryant vs. Tim Woods for District 5, and incumbent Jeff Caldwell vs. Dennis White for District 7. School board races are nonpartisan.
  • Indiana House District 59: Incumbent Republican Milo Smith vs. Democrat Bob Pitman.

Straight-ticket change

Voters will need to be aware of a change to straight-ticket voting when casting their ballots. According to a new law, anyone voting a straight-party ticket also will have to vote for individuals in at-large races with multiple candidates, such as Bartholomew County Council. No longer will a straight-ticket vote be applied toward candidates in those types of races. Individual votes would also have to be cast for school board, which is nonpartisan.

The reason for the change was that evidence showed that inconsistent categorizing of straight-ticket ballots by voting machine vendors raised questions of whether some tallies reflected the intent of the voters. State legislators debated how to resolve the issue before coming up with this solution during the Indiana General Assembly.

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Follow Election Day developments in Bartholomew County online at therepublic.com, then check back after the polls close at 6 p.m. Tuesday and throughout the evening for voting updates as they come in.

Share your election day stories with The Republic by email at editorial@therepublic.com

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Here are things every voter should know before casting a ballot in the general election:

  • An Indiana driver’s license, Indiana photo ID card, United States passport, military ID and a state university issued photo ID can be accepted to vote. An out-of-state driver’s license cannot be accepted. The local Bureau of Motor Vehicles branch, 745 Schnier Drive, will be open from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Election Day for people who need a driver’s license or state ID card.
  • According to state law, a voter is limited to only two minutes to vote on a voting machine. Each voter should review his or her ballot ahead of time to reduce confusion and any questions. A voter can go online at indianavoters.com and click on “Who’s on your Ballot,” to review their ballot.
  • Voters do not have to stay at the same vote center and wait if there is a long line. They can go to any of the 18 vote centers and vote. A map will be available at each vote center to show where other vote centers are located.
  • Columbus Police Department will have extra patrols of officers on Election Day available, and be just a short distance from most voting centers to assure voters that if they experience any issues they will be handled swiftly.
  • Voting machines are not connected to the Internet.

— Source: Bartholomew County Clerk Jay Phelps

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Work on demand

Sue Durkos, a freelance driver for Uber Technologies Inc., said she’s not sure what her primary occupation would be if it weren’t driving for the ride-hailing company.

The 56-year-old doesn’t have any college education, and she said the restaurant industry she spent 30 years in doesn’t seem interested in her anymore.

There are some drawbacks, she said, including the occasions when Uber lowered its prices and the fact she’s put 25,000 miles on her Honda Accord since enlisting in the spring of 2015. But at least she doesn’t have to settle for a minimum-wage job, she said. She makes $10 to $15 an hour with Uber.

“Before I started Ubering, I was out of work for six months — I could not get a waitressing job or a bartending job,” Durkos said. “Everybody wants a 21-year-old.”

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Durkos is among the swelling throng of Indianapolis workers who are part of the so-called “gig-economy,” which has come to denote the system of matchmaking between independent contractors and consumers over large technology platforms — often in an on-demand fashion.

These jobs are growing at a rapid clip in Indianapolis and around the country, according to a study published earlier this month by the Brookings Institution, thanks in part to platforms that target everything from automobile rides to errand-running.

Among other things, the report found that non-employer firms — mostly independent contractors — in the U.S. ground-passenger transportation industry grew 48 percent from 2012 to 2014. That’s compared to a 6.4 percent growth rate for comparable payroll- employee jobs.

In Indianapolis, those transportation “gig” jobs grew 61 percent over those two years, versus a 4.6 per-cent decline for similar payroll jobs.

To be sure, the number of payroll jobs is far larger than the number of gig jobs, and the study compared growth rates only in the “rides” and “rooms” industries. But there are more freelance jobs per payroll job than ever before, Brookings found, and industries like transportation have seen sharp increases in independent-contractor jobs in recent years, coinciding with the emergence of Uber and Lyft.

“You can see in just a few years … you have astronomical, very rapid growth,” Brookings study author Mark Muro said, “so it’s clearly helping both create markets and helping workers find work — and doing it in a rapid way.”

“It clearly is happening at a large enough scale that it will begin to transform the structure of particular industries.”

The growth of these jobs — which has been pronounced in West Coast “early adopter” cities — has led to varying degrees of disruption for taxi services, hotels, grocery stores and more. But Brookings noted that it remains to be seen the extent to which these platforms eat existing market share from old-guard operations or find previously unserved markets.

Also, if growing segments of the population choose freelance jobs over payroll jobs, Muro said, it can have significant implications on worker benefits. Freelance jobs don’t come with health insurance, retirement plans, paid vacation or Worker’s Compensation.

Local gig players

Uber and Lyft are the popular gig-economy platforms for rides. There’s also Instacart for tasking out grocery shopping duties and Bellhops for help with moving. All have a footprint in Indianapolis.

Related to the gig economy is the “sharing economy,” defined by platforms where people rent their assets, like Airbnb for rooms and homes. Both involve connecting individuals for services, and people who make more than $1,000 in revenue — no matter the platform — qualify as non-employer firms.

Uber and Lyft — each of which is based in California and entered Indianapolis in 2013 — didn’t respond to requests for comments about driver and ridership numbers. Airbnb, which started in 2009, said it has 1,000 local listings. The 27,000 people who’ve visited Indianapolis via its platform is 220 percent higher than at this point last year.

Bellhops, a Tennessee-based company that connects college students with people looking for moving help, started in Indianapolis in 2014 and has hundreds of contractors in the area, officials said.

It wouldn’t give specific figures on freelancers or moving transactions but said the number of year-to-date moves has jumped fourfold from this point last year.

Instacart, which has a more varied fleet of freelancers ranging from their late teens to their early 60s, entered Indianapolis in August 2015. It’s spread from its original service area in Midtown to neighborhoods downtown and on the north side and in Hamilton County. Its fleet of 80 shoppers has at least doubled from this point last year.

“I think the market is great for contractors for the gig economy,” said Kevin Duff, Instacart’s local operations manager. “People want to work in Indianapolis, and they’re attracted by the flexibility of the gig economy — being able to make money when you want to make it, not when someone’s telling you.”

A few local companies have also tapped into the gig economy with their own platforms. One is ClusterTruck, a food-tech company that employs software engineers and cooks but uses about 60 freelance bikers and drivers to make deliveries — including many former Uber and Lyft drivers.

Torchlite is another firm, targeting businesses instead of consumers. Founded in June 2015 by Salesforce.com and Apple Inc. alumna Susan Marshall, Torchlite connects small businesses looking for marketing help with a pool of 350 freelance writers, designers and others. Indianapolis-based Propel has a similar model, but for software development.

“I think it’s a shifting mind-set,” Marshall said, speaking about people wanting flexibility with their work lives. “And I think it’s different types of workers who may have been displaced who are re-entering the workforce who are finding success with freelancing.”

Jobs and benefits

One of the questions Brookings looked into was whether gig jobs effectively stole jobs from comparable industries. But there’s not enough good data to support any strong conclusions, at least not yet.

Indianapolis saw increases in freelance jobs and decreases in payroll jobs. Some cities saw increases in both. But several West Coast cities, like San Jose and Sacramento in California, saw gig jobs grow by triple-digit percentages or high double-digit percentages while payroll jobs declined markedly.

“I think the conventional wisdom is that it’s largely a complement to existing industries and firms paying payrolls,” Muro said. “But I think there is evidence in our work that it may not just be that and it may become a challenge to incumbent work — or even a challenge that cannibalizes some payroll employment.”

Executives running gig economy businesses said cannibalization, if any, depends on the industry.

Bellhops co-founder Cameron Doody said the moving industry has two segments — people who pay several hundred or even thousands of dollars to a professional moving company, and people who do it themselves.

He said Bellhops believes there are customers looking for small-scale moves who would be willing to pay for services, but not at the cost companies geared for large-scale moves charge.

“We’re coming in and making full-service moving within reach of everybody for the first time,” Doody said. “So our average full-service move … is under $400, and the reason we’re able to do that is because of tech.”

Meanwhile, hiring drivers in the food delivery industry might be a thing of the past, especially as smartphone apps for accepting freelance delivery jobs become more prevalent. Robb Greene, director of distribution at ClusterTruck, said, “I think the delivery industry as a whole is moving toward that independent-contracting route, anyway.”

Freelancers are effectively getting flexibility in exchange for traditional worker benefits, industry professionals said. And some freelancers, including college students, are more interested in work than in benefits.

Durkos, the Uber driver, said she never had any of those benefits, anyway, and she expects to work until she dies.

“And I can take vacations anytime I want,” she said, acknowledging that they aren’t paid.

Marshall, of Torchlite, said those are important discussions, and she’s seen some freelancers in the industry effectively unionize to combine resources and leverage to secure health insurance from health insurance companies, for example.

She said while she hasn’t seen such activity locally, her company does facilitate online forums for freelancers to share best practices on such matters.

And not all freelancers need benefits, she said. Some participate in the benefits of their spouses. Some have higher earnings, with several “torchliters” pulling in as much as $80,000 annually.

Despite the drawbacks, some freelancers said the technology platforms have improved their quality of life beyond measure. And they aren’t just mobile apps where a pool of freelancers can pick jobs as they come, but rather online marketplaces like Etsy (for artisans and craftmakers) and Thumbtack (for handymen, personal trainers and more), where freelancers can set up digital storefronts.

Shannon Hoskins, an Indianapolis-based general contractor, had been operating as a sole proprietorship since about 2006. In 2013, he joined Thumbtack, which he said took his business from about three jobs a month to two or three jobs a week. He recently brought on two subcontractors and said he’s looking to hire more employees soon.

“We’ve gotten so busy at this point that I’ve had to shut my leads down for a little bit,” he said. “I’m hoping it stays this way.”

Stewart: ‘Life is complete’

Tony Stewart is one of the most accomplished drivers in NASCAR history, but this weekend, he’s receiving an honor he may never have imagined.

The Columbus native is getting his own bobblehead doll.

“I don’t know that I ever aspired to or ever thought my career would be complete until I got a bobblehead,” Stewart said in a news release. “But now I’ve got one, so now my life is complete.”

Track president Eddie Gossage came up with the idea for the bobblehead as part of “Tony Stewart’s Last Ride at Texas Motor Speedway.” The venue will hand out the bobbleheads to the first 30,000 fans who show up for today’s AAA Texas 500.

Stewart jokingly accused Gossage of cutting costs by mounting his oversized head on a skinnier model’s body.

“Unfortunately, it does look like me — that’s the scary part,” Stewart said. “I think people are going to put them in the corners of their house to keep the insects and mice away. It will scare everybody and probably ward off intruders.”

Stewart currently sits 14th in the standings. He hopes to move up to 13th, which is as high as he could go in the Chase, in the season’s final three races.

At Texas, Stewart has a pair of victories in his 18-year Sprint Cup career. He has eight top-three finishes, 12 top-fives, 23 top-10s, two poles and has led a total of 183 laps in his 35 career Sprint Cup starts at the venue.

“The track is a great track,” Stewart said. “Eddie is smart enough to know that repaving this track is the worst thing he could do to it right now. This track has enough age on it that, when it is hot and slick, everybody is racing all over the track, and that makes good racing. They treat everybody well here. I think this is the second- or third-biggest purse of the year for us and the crowd here is awesome. It’s a great, great market for our sport.”

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TODAY’S RACE

AAA Texas 500, 2 p.m. (NBC)

Starting position: (qualifying Saturday)

LAST RACE

Finished 26th in Goody’s Rast Relief 500

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High school sports roundup – November 6

GIRLS BASKETball

Panthers slay Dragons

NORTH VERNON — Jennings County jumped out to a 32-15 halftime lead Saturday afternoon and cruised from there to a 71-45 season-opening win against Silver Creek.

Sidney Gerkin led the Panthers with 21 points. Eliza Gaspere added 11, and Callie Wilder had nine.

Eagles down Cardinals

BLOOMFIELD — Brown County overcame a four-point halftime deficit by outscoring Bloomfield 12-3 in the third quarter and went on to post a 36-32 season-opening win.

Maddy Edds led the Eagles with 16 points. Vanessa Hoskins added eight.

Spartans top Cougars

GREENSBURG — South Decatur was within four points after three quarters, but Southwestern (Shelby) pulled away in the fourth for a 45-32 Mid-Hoosier Conference win.

Taylor Best led the Cougars (0-2, 0-1) with 10 points. Madison Owens added eight.

High school scoreboard – November 6

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Jennings County 71, Silver Creek 45

Silver Creek;11;4;15;15;—;45

Jennings County;21;11;23;16;—;71

Silver Creek (1-1): May 5 0-1 13, Polston 5 0-0 12, Wilkinson 1 4-4 6, O’Neil 3 0-0 6, Ledden 1 0-0 2, Steele 1 0-0 2, Wright 1 0-0 2, Whitlock 1 0-2 2. Totals: 27 11-15 71.

Jennings County (1-0): Sidney Gerkin 7 6-6 21, Eliza Gasper 4 0-0 11, Alana Daeger 1 0-0 2, Macy Roth 2 3-6 7, Sydney Brown 1 1-1 3, Alexus Brown 4 0-0 8, Callie Wilder 4 1-2 9, Brooklyn Gaines 3 0-0 8, Baylee Byford 1 0-0 2. Totals: 18 4-9 45.

3-point goals: Silver Creek 5 (May 3, Polston 2); Jennings County 6 (Gasper 3, Gaines 2, Gerkin).

Brown County 36, Bloomfield 32

Brown County;4;8;12;12;—;36

Bloomfield;4;12;3;13;—;32

Brown County (1-0): Dasia Wilkerson 1 0-0 2, Vanessa Hoskins 4 0-1 8, Azhia Morgan 2 0-0 4, Maddy Edds 8 0-3 16, Savannah Lovins 3 0-0 6,  Aubrey Hollander 0 0-2 0, Ryanne Smith 0 0-0 0, Allison Stogsdill 0 0-0 0, Gracie Matlock 0 0-0 0. Totals: 18 0-6 36.

Bloomfield (0-1): Haley England 1 0-0 2, Katie Small 1 0-0 2, Felicity Graf 4 2-2 10, Malea Toon 6 6-10 18, Maizy Gilliand 0 0-1 0, Hannah Walls 0 0-0 0, Nicole Kilzer 0 0-0 0. Kayla Pinnick 0 0-0 0. Totals: 12 8-13 32.

3-point goals: none.

Southwestern (Shelby) 45, South Decatur 32

Southwestern;13;8;9;15—;45

South Decatur;10;10;6;6;—;32

Southwestern (2-0, 1-0): Jackson 0 0-0 0, Cox 2 8-9 12, Benson 2 2-4 6, Correll 0 0-0 0, Abel 3 1-2 9, Kessler 0 0-0 0, DeArmitt 2 0-0 4, Wendling 6 0-2 12, Van Gorden 1 0-1 2. Totals: 16 11-18 45.

South Decatur (0-2, 0-1): Taylor Best 2 5-6 10, Stacy Fox 0 6-8 6, Annie Gant 1 0-0 2, Mackenzie Kopplin 2 0-0 4, Madison Owens 2 4-6 8, Pilar Gracia 1 0-1 2, Hannah Ballard 0 0-0 0, Sierra Lange 0 0-0 0, Samantha Goodfellow 0 0-0 0, Hannah Miller 0 0-0 0, Sierra Deppe 0 0-0 0. Totals: 8 15-21 32.

3-point goals: Southwestern 2 (Abel 2); South Decatur 1 (Best).

Edinburgh 53, Indianapolis Metropolitan 25

Edinburgh;16;17;13;7;—;53

Metropolitan;4;5;6;10;—;25

Edinburgh (1-0): Abi Scrogham 0 2-2 2, Destiney Ramey 2 0-0 5, Haven Link 0 0-0 0, Vanessa McManaway 2 0-0 4, Taylor Tatlock 1 3-4 5, Bri Howard 5 0-1 13, Sidney Beier 4 2-2 10, Makenzie Hill 2 1-2 6, Mary Franklin 0 0-0 0, Allie Schooler 3 0-0 6, Kayla Kelley 1 0-0 2. Totals: 20 8-11 53.

Metropolitan (0-1): Jamiya McGee 2 2-3 6, TiSharon Thompson 2 0-0 4, Kendra Hayes 2 0-2 4, Dashyenne Johnson 0 0-0 0, Maya Stover 4 2-4 10, Jahhneise Stephens 0 1-2 1. Totals: 10 5-11 25.

3-point goals: Edinburgh 5 (Howard 3, Ramey, Hill); Metropolitan 0.

Around Town – November 6

Orchids to

• Dr. Forbes for being so kind by work me in the schedule to remove bone fragments.

• anyone that will do a pet food drive, as I have extra cat food to donate after losing my beloved cat.

• Eddie Wheeler for his letter to the editor in Saturday’s paper, from a grandmother who cares.

• Dave Clark for raking and blowing our leaves, from the Tintail neighbors.

• Columbus City engineers for the painting job in Forest Park.

• Eddie Wheeler for his letter to the editor that I wish I had written.

• The Republic for placing college football games to be televised off to the side in Saturday’s newspaper.

• Braylyn at Fantastic Sams for a fantastic job on my hair Friday from a new client.

Happy Birthday to

• Kathy Garrett, from Nate and Donna.

• Joshua Morris and Clifford Olmstead, from Bethel Baptist Church.

• Joyce Hill, from Elsie.

• Jeannette McKim, from Home Ec friends.

• Trish Jenco.

• Janet McKinney.

• Jason Hardy.

• Dimitri Alano.

• Jeannie Cravens, from Pastor Marvin Brown and Trinity Baptist Church.

• Bev Burton, from Pastor Lewis and The Who So Ever Will Community Church.

• Jim Newton, from Sue.

• Twanette Miller, from Aunt Sue.

Happy Birthday to …

• Glenda Patton, love your whole family.

• Trevor Allen-David Baker, from the Baker family.

• Barbara Wadsworth, from Dove Ministries.

Happy Anniversary to

• Katie and Ryan Putnam, from your family and Donna.

Looking Back – November 6

2006

Ted Hooker of Columbus dropped into the Parks and Recreation Department headquarters to tell officials he had just recorded his 2,000th mile of biking on the city’s popular People Trail.

1991

On the coldest Election Day in history, just 5,814 of the 16,636 people registered to vote in the city, the lowest number of voters in a municipal election in at least 20 years, chose to retain all incumbents, including Mayor Robert Stewart.

1966

The new Hauser Junior-Senior High School, which opened for classes in September, was formally dedicated.

End around? Potential move to 5A would let Bull Dogs avoid Trojans

Sometimes the harsh reality of sports is that a team is measured by its success in the postseason.

For some teams, that reality is unjust. One such team that would fall into that category is the Columbus North football squad.

This season, the Bull Dogs put together their best regular season since Columbus split into North and East in 1973. North won its first seven games, went 8-1 in the regular season and won its first playoff game.

“It’s awesome to accomplish all of that,” senior running back Mitchell Burton said following Friday’s 41-14 loss to Center Grove. “I wish we could have got the sectional title, but we did pretty good, and I’m pretty proud of my team.”

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Unfortunately for the Bull Dogs, they ran into the same roadblock they’ve run into now five of the past six seasons. Center Grove, now 10-1, is the defending Class 6A state champion. The Trojans also won the 5A state title in 2008, which was the year after North last beat them.

Friday’s loss was especially painful because the Bull Dogs had the best team they’ve had since that 2007 squad came within a touchdown of playing in the state finals.

Many North fans thought this might be the year the Bull Dogs could take down Center Grove.

“It’s not going to sink in right now because we’re in pain,” North coach Tim Bless said. “Everybody is unhappy when you end your season with a bitter loss. But as we reflect on this season, we’re going to be very proud of this senior class and what they accomplished for returning Bull Dog football to excellence.”

That senior class featured several standouts, including Burton and quarterback Triston Perry, who will graduate as the second-leading rusher and passer, respectively, in school history.

Also gone will be four of the five offensive linemen, all four defensive linemen, middle linebacker and leading tackler Tucker Payne and safety Harley Huser, who also was a big-time threat in the passing and return games. Mark Salle-Tabor, who was a solid kicker and punter, also graduates.

But the Bull Dogs have enough key players returning that they should be able to contend for a Conference Indiana title again next season. Leading receivers Jaylen Flemmons, Trey Vincent and Tristan Bailey will be back, as will three of the top four linebackers and three of the four defensive backs, led by Division I prospect J.D. Harris.

Sophomore Trenton Kelley and junior Cortez Bandy will have big shoes to fill as they look to replace Perry and Burton at quarterback and tailback.

“It was an awesome senior class and so many of those kids were impact players,” Bless said. “However, as we look through the roster, we have a lot of young talent that played big roles for us this season. Then, we had a very successful JV and a very successful freshman season, so the future is certainly bright.”

Both the JV and freshman teams went 8-1 this season.

Whether North will have to go through Center Grove again the next two years could be decided this week. If defending Class 5A state champion Fort Wayne Snider wins its regional game against Mishawaka on Friday, the Panthers will move up to 6A under the IHSAA’s tournament success factor.

Westfield is primed to move from 5A to 6A because of a jump in enrollment, and Indianapolis Tech might be knocking on the door, as well. Cathedral needs a win against Ben Davis on Friday to remain in 6A.

So how does that effect the Bull Dogs?

When the IHSAA last classified the teams two years ago, North was the smallest of the 32 teams in 6A. So if Snider or Westfield, or both, move up to 6A, one or two teams will have to move down to 5A, assuming the IHSAA doesn’t mess with the 32-school set up at the 6A level.

One of those teams moving down will be Cathedral, if it loses on Friday. Another might be North.

Moving down to 5A, however, won’t guarantee the Bull Dogs postseason success. If Columbus East, which has beaten North four of the past five years, makes it to the 5A state finals this year, the Olympians would stay in 5A. Otherwise, they move back down to 4A.

Either way, it will be an interesting rest of the postseason and offseason to find out how things will shake out for the next two years.

If the Bull Dogs are lucky, they’ll avoid Center Grove.

Ted Schultz is sports editor for The Republic. He can be reached at tschultz@therepublic.com or 812-379-5628.

Dale Spears

Columbus

Dale Spears, 74, of Columbus, died at 5:52 p.m. Friday, November 4, 2016, at Columbus Regional Hospital Emergency Room.

Mr. Spears was born August 26, 1942, in Columbus, to Melvin E. and Beatrice McDaniel Spears.

He married Shirley Denny March 17, 1963. He later married Janice S. Lawles Taylor March 26, 1976.

Dale was a U.S. Navy veteran and was the retired owner of Neal Bait Manufacturing.

An avid boxer, Dale was a PAL boxing coach for 27 years and he was a life time member of Indiana Golden Gloves. He enjoyed fishing and watching cooking programs.

Survivors include his wife, Janice; children, Lisha Branum of Columbus, Larry Taylor Jr. (Bobie Riggs) of Martinsville, Louann (Ray) Vaught of Nashville, Teresa Spears (Tony Irvin) of Columbus, Jeff (Melissa) Spears of Columbus and Larry (Angela) Taylor III of Franklin; grandchildren, Justin Branum, Bolarr, Carter, Jordison and Lydia Taylor, Kyle , Brittany and Sierra Vaught, Johnny Cutsinger, Nastassia Powers, Chris and Jana Anderson, Seth and Shelby Spears, Chelsey and Levi England, Alyssa Kinworthy and Cade Bryant; several great-grandchildren; sisters, Joanie Schooler and Janie (Jack) Mullis of Columbus; and several nieces and nephews.

Dale was preceded in death by his parents; son, Jonathon Dale Spears; a brother; and three sisters.

The funeral will be conducted at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Barkes, Weaver & Glick Funeral Home on Washington Street. Family and friends may call from 11 a.m. until service time Tuesday. Burial will be at Bethel Baptist Cemetery. Full military rites will be presented by the Bartholomew County Veterans Honor Guard.

Memorial contributions may be made to Shriner’s Hospital for Children Burn Care.

Online condolences and special memories may be shared with the Spears family at barkesweaverglick.com.

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