Indiana
Letter to the editor: A misguided attack on Indiana’s public libraries
I am writing to strongly oppose Indiana Senate Bill 283, introduced by Sen. Gary Byrne (District 47), which proposes stripping public libraries of their autonomy by transferring their governance and operations to county governments. This bill is a direct threat to the stability and effectiveness of library services that Hoosiers depend on daily.
Public libraries are not mere book warehouses; they are critical providers of tailored services such as early literacy programs, technology access, local education initiatives, and rural Internet connection. Centralizing control under county governments will stifle this responsiveness, replacing effective local governance with bureaucratic inefficiency.
The proposed timeline is absurd. Expecting counties to take over library assets, liabilities and operations by mid-2025 will cause chaos, disrupt vital services and saddle counties with massive transition costs and responsibilities they are ill-equipped to handle. The financial and logistical fallout will far outweigh any imagined benefit.
Indiana’s public libraries thrive because they operate independently, grounded in the needs of their communities. Senate Bill 283 dismisses this proven model in favor of a reckless, ill-conceived overhaul that serves no one.
I urge lawmakers to reject this harmful legislation and protect one of Indiana’s most valuable public institutions.
— John D. Moore
Lafayette, Indiana
Indiana
Community comes together to honor memory of Hailey Buzbee
FISHERS, Ind. (WISH) — The family of Hailey Buzbee on Thursday night invited the public to join a celebration of her life at ITOWN Church in Fishers, in the neighborhood where Buzbee lived.
The church parking lot was packed. It was filled with people who both knew Buzbee or heard her story.
The Hamilton Southeastern High School student was reported missing on Jan. 5, sparking a search that garnered national attention. Police later discovered her remains in Perry County, Ohio, prompting an outpouring of support from friends, coworkers, and the community.
People dressed in Hailey’s favorite color pink. Inside the church, Buzbee’s casket sat on the stage, flanked by two photographs of her.
Buzbee’s Uncle Mark Miranda said, “She got the nickname ‘Hey Hey,’ and she was her Daddy’s princess and loved wearing princess dresses everywhere whether it’s appropriate or not. That said, Hailey was shy, but funny around people she was comfortable with.”
He said she loved to tell Dad jokes. “The world is a sadder place without you, Hailey, but it is not broken. You’re still in our lives. Your family will carry your legacy, your love, in our hearts, your memories in our minds, and your legacy within our actions.”
Hailey’s father, Beau, did not speak but had a pastor read a letter: “For the time we have together on this Earth, I still consider myself the luckiest dad ever, and I will carry you forever, revisiting memories every single day.”
Dave Sumrall, pastor at the church, prayed to God for a step forward. “For all the amazing stories that will come in this horrific tragedy, we thank you already for the lives that have been saved, for the children that have been rescued, for the laws that will be changed, for the difference that will be made. We pray that the presence and your power would fill the Buzbee family.”
The Buzbee family and her community have been pushing to expand an Indiana alert system that could possibly save other children at risk.
When Buzbee left her home Jan. 6, she left a note that she had run away. Tyler Thomas, 39, picked her up that day and took her to Ohio. Investigators found her remains on Feb. 1.
Indiana
Maple syrup season getting underway in central Indiana as weather turns favorable
After weeks of bitter cold and deep snow across central Indiana, a quieter but much sweeter seasonal shift is beginning to take shape. Maple syrup producers across the region are starting to tap trees as weather conditions line up for the first meaningful sap flow of the season.
The key ingredient behind maple syrup production is the freeze-thaw cycle, and that pattern is settling in nicely over the next few days. Overnight temperatures dipping just below freezing, paired with afternoon highs climbing into the upper 30s and around 40 degrees, create the ideal pressure changes inside maple trees that allow sap to move. When nights are cold, trees build internal pressure. When days warm, that pressure releases, sending sap flowing through taps and into collection systems.
Local producers say the upcoming stretch looks promising. One central Indiana sugar camp noted that the next couple of days should produce a solid early run before temperatures warm too much heading into Sunday. Once daytime highs climb well above the 40s and overnight lows stop dropping below freezing, sap flow typically slows or pauses.
Recent weather patterns may also help this year’s production. While snowpack across central Indiana has not been extremely deep, consistent snow cover in recent weeks likely helped insulate tree roots and maintain steady ground moisture. That slow melt provides trees with water reserves needed to support sap production.
Unlike some past seasons, drought is not a major concern across most of central Indiana this year. Adequate soil moisture through fall and winter plays an important role in determining how much sap trees can produce. However, producers farther north in Indiana may face more challenges, where drought conditions have been more pronounced.
Maple syrup season in Indiana typically begins in late January, peaks through February, and winds down by mid-to-late March once trees begin budding. With favorable temperatures arriving now, the first signs of the season are already taking shape.
For producers and maple syrup fans alike, this brief window of late-winter weather is more than just a warmup toward spring, it is the start of one of Indiana’s most time-honored traditions.
Indiana
GM Chad Buchanan on why Pacers traded for Ivica Zubac
There are nights when the magic of the Pacers’ Finals run last summer seems so far in the rearview mirror.
Nights like Wednesday at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, when Indiana gave the night off to nearly all of the players who made that run possible, allowing them to get an extra night to rest injuries on the way into the All-Star break.
But Pacers general manager Chad Buchanan’s second-quarter appearance on the FanDuel Sports Network served as a reminder that Indiana’s front office remains in championship mode, even as the Pacers find themselves in the middle of a lottery fight due to an injury-riddled season.
Buchanan’s appearance underlined the urgency Indiana feels to capitalize on the promise of the past two seasons as Eastern Conference contenders, a status that drove last week’s blockbuster trade for former Clippers center Ivica Zubac.
Indiana sees Zubac as a core piece for a contender
The Pacers gave up a lot to get Zubac: Bennedict Mathurin, Isaiah Jackson and three draft picks, including the potential to lose their 2026 first-rounder to the Clippers if that pick falls between picks 5-9.
“For us, the starting center position was our biggest hole, and you’re going to have to give up something to fill it,” Buchanan said. “We did give up a lot. Sometimes, in this business, you have to take a risk, and we’re taking a risk adding a new player, but we’re very confident he’s going to be a great fit with us.”
Indiana lost long-time center Myles Turner to the Bucks in free agency last offseason, leaving the Pacers’ championship core with a significant hole in the middle.
A bruising big man who will alter the center’s role in the Pacers system because of his skill set, Zubac brings positioning, defense and a knack for finishing at the rim.
Most importantly, he fills what Indiana saw as a glaring hole if it wants to be back in the Eastern Conference mix next season.
“We’re excited about Ivica,” Buchanan said. “Losing what we lost with Myles, we felt like that position was something we wanted to address to give this team the best chance to compete at the level we saw them compete at last year.”
Zubac will not make his Pacers debut “for a while” due to a lingering ankle issue.
But Indiana would like to see him on the floor at some point, even though the trade leaves the Pacers with plenty of incentive to stay firmly seated at the bottom of the Eastern Conference.
“You’re going to see some chemistry built,” Buchanan said. “Once Big Zu is healthy and back playing, we want to see him get out there with his new teammates in our system.”
Tyrese Haliburton still sets the tone
The biggest reason for Indiana’s swoon this season is that its best player remains on the bench.
Buchanan pointed out Wednesday that the fact Haliburton is on the bench at all is something that should be noted. While taking special care to point out that the Pacers still operate the way they did while pursuing a championship last season, the Indiana general manager credited Haliburton for setting the tone.
“In the NBA, when someone has a season-ending injury, you don’t see them,” Buchanan said. “Tyrese Haliburton’s sitting on the bench every second for us, he’s on every road trip, he’s at every practice. That is what a leader does. His personality, his leadership defines who this team is.”
Pacers feel an urgency to get back to the Finals
The Zubac deal was driven by a desire to maximize the team’s championship window.
While Haliburton is still only 25 years old, Buchanan emphasized that Indiana is aware that the picture in the NBA can change quickly.
“When we looked at our team, when you look back to last year, the run we made, how special this group has shown it can be when you have the full team together. … We owe this group every chance to compete,” Buchanan said. “Because the window, as you know, is not always open for long in the NBA.”
Haliburton’s heartbreaking Achilles injury in Game 7 left the Pacers fighting an uphill battle this season.
But the Pacers are still a team that has its eyes on the ultimate prize, even though injuries have forced Indiana to play through a rough season before chasing it again in earnest.
The core of Indiana’s roster is still there, seated in a line at the Barclays Center on Wednesday night.
“If we would have done nothing, just sat back and watched other teams chase a championship, that’s no fun,” Buchanan said. “We want to be in that race. We want to be in that chase, and this team deserves it.”
Dustin Dopirak covers the Pacers all season. Get more coverage on IndyStarTV and with the Pacers Insider newsletter.
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