Monthly Archives: January 2021

Columbus man dies in crash on 10th Street

A Columbus driver was killed in a three-vehicle crash Monday morning at 10th Street and Whitfield Drive.

73-year-old Dennis Deffenbaugh of Columbus died when his pickup was struck by an SUV as he left the parking lot at Lowe’s at about 9:03 a.m. Monday morning, says Bartholomew County Coroner Clayton Nolting.

Nolting says Deffenbaugh was killed by blunt force trauma to the chest and upper cervical spine and the death is being ruled accidental.

Columbus police say that Deffenbaugh’s pickup collided in the intersection with an SUV being driven by 39-year-old Nicoleta D. Dailey of Hope. After the initial collision, Dailey’s vehicle struck another SUV being driven by 49-year-old Lorena V. Baird of Columbus, who was stopped in the left turn lane on the west side of the intersection.

Dailey was first taken to Columbus Regional Hospital and then to IU Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. Baird suffered minor injuries but refused medical treatment.

The crash remains under investigation and Nolting said toxicology results are pending.

Photo courtesy of Columbus Police Department

Pence will welcome objections to election results Wednesday

The office of Vice President Mike Pence says that the Columbus native “welcomes” efforts by some lawmakers to “raise objections” when Congress meets Wednesday to certify the November election results.

According to our news-gathering partners at TTWN Media Networks, dozens of House Republicans and 11 GOP Senators have indicated they will challenge the electoral vote that gave a presidential victory to Democrat Joe Biden. On Saturday, the Vice President’s chief of staff, Marc Short, released a statement saying Pence “welcomes the efforts” of those lawmakers “to raise objections and bring forward evidence” before Congress on January 6th.

Indiana U.S. Senator Mike Braun is on the list of Republicans on Capitol Hill who will object to the election results. Braun on Saturday released a statement with other Republicans that said there are too many unanswered questions about voter fraud and the legitimacy of the November election to just sit by. Braun wants a 10-day pause to look for answers regarding absentee and mail-in ballots, as well as to look into questions as to whether key states followed state and federal election laws.

Columbus city offices remain closed to public

Columbus city government offices will remain largely closed through at least the end of the month due to COVID 19 increases.

According to the city, official business will still continue and employees will still be working to answer phone and e-mails. But meetings with the public will be handled by appointment only.’

City government meetings will continue with mostly virtual meetings through January. That will include the City Council, the Board of Works and Public Safety, City Utilities, the Human Rights Commission, Redevelopment Commission and the Board of Zoning Appeals. You can watch a live-stream of city government meetings through the city website at columbus.in.gov and clicking on the video link on the home page.

The Columbus City Utilities building is closed to the public, although the drive-through window will remain open. ColumBUS transit routes will continue to run as normal.

Hamilton Center and the Columbus Gymnastics Center will remain open for scheduled activities, but other visitors will be by appointment only.

Most area counties start New Year in red zone on COVID-19

Bartholomew County is starting the new year nearly surrounded with counties that are in the red on the State of Indiana’s COVID-19 advisory level map.

Johnson, Brown, Jackson and Jennings counties are all still in the red advisory level tracked by the state, or showing severe spread of the disease, according to yesterday’s update. Once a county is listed as being red, it can only drop back the orange level after two consecutive weeks of lower levels of infection. But those counties are all still showing the severe spread currently.

Bartholomew, Shelby and Decatur counties remain orange on the state map, showing serious spread of the disease.

Johnson County was the only area county to report new deaths yesterday, with two. Johnson County also led the area with 96 new cases. Bartholomew had 49, Decatur 11, Jennings 3, Jackson 21, Brown 2 and Shelby County 19.

Statewide Indiana added 3,002 new positive cases in yesterday’s tally, although some of those dated back as far as November 24th. There were 54 deaths reported yesterday, going back to Dec. 5th. That brings Indiana to 8,111 deaths since the pandemic started. The statewide 7-day positive rate is at 14.7 percent, according to the state health department.

BCSC starts new semester tomorrow with hybrid model

Bartholomew Consolidated Schools are starting the new year with in-person, five-day-a-week teaching for elementary students and with what they are calling a hybrid model of in-person and online learning for secondary students. That is a move back from the all e-learning program that had been in place at the end of last semester.

At the middle and high school level, students will attend part of the week in class and part in e-learning, depending on the letters of their last name. A to K students will be in person Mondays and Tuesdays, while L through Z students will be in person Thursdays and Fridays. Should the county drop into the red level on the Indiana State Department of Health rankings, elementary school students would follow the same model.

The school district announced last week that the hybrid model will be in place for at least two weeks, or Jan. 15th. The district will continue daily to evaluate and to discuss the local situation with local medical professionals including the Bartholomew County Health Department and Columbus Regional Health.

Families that have already signed up for the full-time e-learning, or Bridge program, will continue with distance learning.

The district is encouraging staying home if you have had direct contact within the last 14 days with someone experiencing symptoms or who has been diagnosed with COVID-19. Or if you yourself has shown any of the symptoms.

The new semester starts tomorrow.