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Person injured in electrical fire at Avon home

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Person injured in electrical fire at Avon home


AVON, Ind. (WISH) — A person was injured while performing electrical work Saturday afternoon at a home in Avon, a deputy fire chief said.

The department shortly before 3:05 p.m. Saturday was called to a house fire with entrapment in the 7300 block of Woodside Drive. That’s in the Park Place subdivision northeast of the intersection of U.S. 36/Rockville Road and Hendricks County Road 700 East/North Avon Avenue.

Deputy Chief Robert Phipps of the Avon Fire Department said the person slightly injured a hand.

Phipps said the fire was out on arrival, and no one was trapped.

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No other details on the fire were immediately available.



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Rapid Reaction: Indiana stomps Northwestern 9-2 at Wrigley Field

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Rapid Reaction: Indiana stomps Northwestern 9-2 at Wrigley Field


Northwestern baseball’s cherished tradition of playing at Wrigley Field filled the dugout and the stands with joy and humility. But it did not deliver a win this year, as Indiana (21-25, 7-15 B1G) used two offensive spurts and stifling pitching to outlast the Wildcats (17-25-1, 5-17 B1G) 9-2 on Friday night.



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Threats of violence reported at 2 central Indiana schools, police investigating

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Threats of violence reported at 2 central Indiana schools, police investigating


INDIANAPOLIS — Police are investigating at two central Indiana schools on Friday after reported threats of violence.

Avon High School

According to an alert from Avon High School, the school was placed on a lockdown around 2:14 p.m.

Officials said the lockdown was lifted and the school campus is currently under a ‘secure the building’ status after an anonymous call.

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The following alert was sent out to students and staff of Avon High School on Friday.

The alert said the call referenced threats outside of the building, and the interior of the school was not threatened.

A sweep of both the interior and exterior of the school found no threats.

All students are safe, and they will remain in classrooms until early dismissal, officials said.

Traffic is currently being blocked from entering the campus until an investigation is completed.

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The Avon School Police Department said the incident will now be investigated by Federal authorities.

Zionsville High School

There were also reports of a police presence at Zionsville High School on Friday.

According to Superintendent Dr. Rebecca Coffman, a call indicating a bomb threat was received around 2 p.m.

Law enforcement immediately responded to assess the threat and found it to be non-credible.

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All students were reported to be safe. Students will be released following normal protocols this afternoon.

An investigation is ongoing, Zionsville PD told WRTV.

WRTV has a crew at both scenes.

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.





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Fulton County Area Plan Commission and Data Center Ordinance Committee Sued

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Fulton County Area Plan Commission and Data Center Ordinance Committee Sued


The Fulton County Area Plan Commission and Data Center Ordinance Review Committee are being sued by a resident who believes they are not complying with Indiana’s Open Door Law.

They’ve decided that transparency is not that important,” said Richard O’Neill, a Fulton County resident suing the Area Plan Commission.

Back in March, county commissioners voted 2-1 to approve a one-year data center moratorium, as talk of a possible data center in Akron picked up.

After that vote, the data center review committee was formed to review regulations and look at how other communities handle data centers.

But some residents said they’re concerned the public can’t attend or even listen in on those meetings.

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I’m suing them to get an injunction to stop this committee until such time that they’re willing to have public meetings. So you don’t want the public there, fine, live stream it. They wouldn’t do that. So you have to ask yourself, what do they want to hide?” said O’Neill.

Other community members weighed in on the transparency issues.

When the committee was formed, the county attorney and Area Plan decided to place in the regulations that this committee would be closed to the public. Several people argued this decision and requested it not be closed so the community could feel involved. I stressed and stated at the Area Plan meeting on March 30th that currently the public trust with our local government is at an all time low and this committee not honoring the open door law would only make things worse,” said James Zimmerman, Fulton County resident.

Indiana’s Open Door Law states:

“Government agencies must hold official meetings of a majority of their governing body, such as council or board meetings, publicly. As a citizen, you have the right to attend and record these meetings.”

But the committee said it doesn’t have to follow that law because it’s not considered a “governing body.”

WSBT22 reached out to the committee’s executive director, but has not yet received a response.

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The county attorney feels that they’re in the right and my attorney feels we’re in the right. So we’ll find out from the court,” said O’Neill.

O’Neill said that he’s currently waiting for a different judge to be appointed to his case to set a court date, which should be any day now.



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