Monthly Archives: November 2020

Columbus issues boil water advisory for State Street intersection

Columbus City Utilities is issuing a boil water advisory for customers near the intersection of State and Coovert Streets. That is after emergency repairs made to fix a water main break yesterday.

The utility says that you should boil any water for five minutes before you consume it or use it in food preparation.

The boil water advisory is in effect until the water has passed laboratory testing and residents will be notified when the order is lifted.

If you have any questions you can call the Columbus City Utilities Water Service Hotline at 812-418-6435.

County sees rising hospital bed use, community spread of COVID-19

Bartholomew County is reporting its 60th death from COVID-19.

The most recent death came on Friday, according to details reported to the Indiana State Department of Health. The county has had 40 new positive test results, bringing the total to 1,898.

Under the state color-coded map, Bartholomew County remains yellow or showing moderate spread, while Johnson, Shelby, Decatur, Jennings and Jackson counties are all orange, showing high community spread. Brown County is coded as blue, showing minimal spread.

The Bartholomew County COVID-19 Community Task Force is reporting the per-capita positive testing rate is 45.5, or red. Anything above a 10 is considered substantial spread under the county metrics. The positive rate has not been below the red level since mid-October.  The task force is also reporting 21 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in Bartholomew County.

Statewide, Indiana reported 4,213 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday. That brings the state’s total to 214,509 since the pandemic began. There have been 4,418 COVID-19 deaths in the Hoosier state since the pandemic started after 34 more were announced yesterday.

Bartholomew County to take over most contact tracing

Bartholomew County will be taking over contact tracing duties for COVID-19 again.

The tracing work had previously been taken over by the state. Amanda Organist with the county health department, said that the state is unable to keep up with the COVID-19 contact tracing and has requested the work  fall to the counties again. She said that each positive case requires contacting the patient and going through about an 11-page questionnaire that attempts to identify details of their case including onset times and who the patient may have been in close contact with.

The contact tracer then has to follow up with those who had been in close contact. The goal is to identify and limit the possible spread of the disease. She said each case takes about 45 minutes per patient.

Bartholomew County Commissioners yesterday approved a six-month contract with a worker who would do the contract tracing for the county. The county expects to have the expenses for the work be reimbursed from CARES Act funding.

Bartholomew County poll workers isolating after positive virus test

A Bartholomew County poll worker tested positive for COVID-19 following last week’s election, but does not appear to have met the definition of close contact with members of the public according to County Clerk Jay Phelps.

Phelps said that the infected poll worker was serving at Westside Community Church last Tuesday. After finding out, Phelps said he contacted the other workers at that voting center and the inspector in charge of the location. The other poll workers are quarantining for two weeks as a precaution. Phelps said he also discussed the situation with the Bartholomew County Health Department nursing division.

The infected worker wore a mask all day, sanitized their hands frequently and had, at most, 90 seconds of contact with each voter. Social distancing was also observed, Phelps said.

Because the poll worker did not have 15 minutes of close contact with the public, the exposure to the public would be considered minor, Phelps said.

The poll worker, who has been hospitalized, began showing symptoms on Friday and did not have any symptoms on Election Day. The worker is expected to make a full recovery and to be released later this week, Phelps said.

The name of the worker is not being released for confidentiality reasons, Phelps said.

Drug dealing charged after Sunday traffic stop

Jon E. Gressel. Photo courtesy of Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department.

A traffic stop Sunday afternoon on Jonathan Moore Pike led to the arrest of a Columbus man on drug-related charges including dealing in methamphetamine.

A deputy pulled over a vehicle being driven by 59-year-old Jon E. Gressel of Columbus at about 3:36 Sunday afternoon. Gressel had several outstanding warrants.

A search revealed he was carrying drugs and drug-related items.

In addition to warrants from Bartholomew, Jackson and Marion counties, Gressel is facing new charges of dealing methamphetamine and possessing meth, marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Deputies capture man accused in truck theft

Travis R. White. Photo courtesy of Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department

Bartholomew County authorities caught a man accused of stealing a truck in Hamilton County.

A deputy noticed a truck speed into a neighborhood near 11th and California streets at about 4:14 p.m. Sunday afternoon. The truck was found empty soon afterwards near 8th and Sycamore streets. The vehicle had been reported stolen out of Hamilton County.

A tip later that evening led deputies to a local business where they found a suspect, 34-year-old Travis R. White of Elwood. The arrested him as he left the store on preliminary charges of possession of stolen property with a prior conviction and of methamphetamine, as well as outstanding warrants from another county on charges of burglary and vehicle theft.

Legal Aid offering free phone clinic Tuesday

Legal Aid will be holding a free Legal Aid Clinic by phone for residents of the agency’s eight-county district on Tuesday. That district includes Bartholomew, Brown, Decatur, Jackson, Jennings, Johnson, Rush, and Shelby counties.

The Legal Aid Clinic uses local volunteer attorneys, to offer free legal consultations to low-income individuals. You can expect to receive a brief consultation over the phone to answer general questions, to offer legal information, or to receive other assistance or advice.

Although the clinic will be from 3 to 5:30 p.m., you must first register between noon and 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, by calling Legal Aid at 812-378-0358.

Hospitals warn of dangers if precautions ignored

Local hospitals are urging you to take safety precautions as COVID-19 cases rise in our area.

Columbus Regional Health and Schneck Medical Center in Seymour have issued a joint warning, urging the use of masks, social distancing and hand washing to stem the increase.

The two hospitals said they are joining forces asking you to do your part to prevent mass outbreaks so that medical providers can preserve vital resources, such as staff and inpatient capacity, in order to continue responding to the pandemic. They say that as temperatures continue to cool and people engage in less outdoor activities, limiting in-person social gatherings and wearing a mask around anyone not in your household is more important than ever.

The hospitals say that face coverings, when worn properly greatly reduce the amount of virus-containing droplets or particles people emit and absorb. Maintaining a distance of 6-feet or more from others when in public and frequent hand-washing prevent the spread of coronavirus, but also other illnesses and bacteria that commonly circulate.

Click It or Ticket campaign kicks off today

The Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department is joining more than 250 other Indiana law enforcement agencies cracking down for seat belt violations during the annual Click It or Ticket campaign.

The enforcement effort starts today and runs through Nov. 29th. It includes overtime patrols to look for those driving or riding in vehicles without seatbelts. Funding for the effort is provided by the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute.

Sheriff Matt Myers says buckling up saves lives. Unrestrained motorists accounted for more than half of the fatalities in vehicle crashes.

Indiana has a primary seat belt law, which allows officers to stop and to cite drivers and passengers for failing to wear a seat belt. Drivers can also be cited for each unbuckled passenger in the vehicle under the age of 16. Children under the age of eight must be properly restrained in a federally approved child or booster seat.