Indianapolis, IN
Central Indiana Wish celebrates 40 years, reveals surprise wish for Carmel boy
INDIANAPOLIS — Hoosiers packed the JW Marriott in Downtown Indianapolis to rejoice Central Indiana Kids’s Want Fund.
Yearly on World Want Day, Central Indiana Want hosts a gala to rejoice all the needs the muse has granted for kids and their households combating important sicknesses.
This 12 months’s inspirational occasion featured a efficiency from Grace, a younger woman the muse gifted a piano to.
The gala additionally featured a shock want reveal for Charles, a baby from Carmel who was identified with Leukemia in 2021.
“Charles was having hassle strolling. He had no vitality. He had damaged his arm within the yard,” Laura Jones, Charles’s mother, mentioned. “When he had a fever, we took him to a pediatrician. They took a blood pattern, and our life was modified.”
Central Indiana Want made Charles’s dream come true. They gifted his household with a visit to Disney.
Jones says Charles is in remission and so they stay up for his commencement subsequent spring.
This 12 months, Central Indiana Want celebrated 40 years of creating needs come true.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis man leads class action lawsuits claiming rental discrimination
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — An Indianapolis man is leading two class action lawsuits, accusing two separate housing providers of discriminatory practices in their rental policies.
Marckus Williams and the Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana are suing Tricon Residential and Progress Residential, two nationwide housing providers that collectively managing more than 130,000 properties.
Williams tells I-Team 8 that he had long since served his time for a felony conviction, and even had his record expunged, when both housing providers denied his rental applications.
“This is not just me. This is an everyday thing for people who have felonies,” Williams said.
Williams says he’s changed since being convicted on drug charges in 2012. He now co-owns the Indy Fresh Market, a grocery built to serve an Indianapolis food desert.
“I did my time, I came home, I’m an advocate for the community,” Williams said.
Amy Nelson, the executive director of Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana, says the lawsuits are aimed at ending “blanket bans” on criminal and eviction history. The center advocates for applicants to be judged on a case-by-case basis.
“Past histories, past crimes should not always be continually held against us,” Nelson said. “People deserve second chances, particularly those who paid their debt to society.”
The housing center’s lawsuit against Progress alleges “arbitrary criminal history policies.”
It claims a Progress “blanket ban” on renting to people with felony convictions led to Black applicants being disqualified at a rate more than eight times than the proportion of white people disqualified, between 2012 and 2021.
The housing center says Tricon’s ban on renting to people with felonies disqualified Black applicants more than five times the amount of white applicants in the last seven years.
Tricon Residential told I-Team 8 in a statement, “Tricon Residential adheres to all fair housing laws and believes the allegations in this suit are baseless. We review resident applications fairly, ethically, and objectively, employing a ‘blind’ screening process not dissimilar from procedures used to review applicants for mortgages, apartment rentals, car leases, and credit cards.”
A spokesperson for Progress Residential said, “As a leading professional property manager, we are committed to promoting a fair and equitable screening process for all applicants. Although we do not comment on pending litigation, we take these allegations seriously and are currently reviewing the claims made in the lawsuit.”
Both class action lawsuits are still adding plaintiffs nationwide.
The housing center asks that anyone who believes they have experienced similar discrimination involving this company to contact them.
Indianapolis, IN
2 call for change to prevent sexual harassment in Indiana politics
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Two members of Indiana’s best political team on Friday said a major cultural change is needed in Indiana politics to prevent sexual harassment.
Senate Democrats reelected Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, as Senate minority leader on Monday after the IndyStar revealed two female former staffers and a female former intern accused Taylor of sexually harassing them over several years. Taylor did not deny the allegations in a statement to the IndyStar but has refused to answer any questions about the allegations since. He made only a vague reference to them in his Organization Day remarks on Tuesday. The allegations against Taylor come barely four months after three former administration and campaign staffers revealed a pattern of sexual harassment by Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett’s former chief of staff and deputy mayor, Thomas Cook.
Dana Black, podcast host and former deputy director of engagement for the Indiana Democratic Party, told “All INdiana Politics” that men have a responsibility not only to not subject women to unwanted sexual advances, but also to dissuade other men from doing so. She said she knows Taylor personally and is “incredibly disappointed” by the allegations against him.
“Somebody needs to stand up to these men who feel like it is okay to do whatever they feel like doing,” she said.
Mario Massillamany, chair of the Hamilton County Republican Party, has lobbying experience at the Statehouse. He said the General Assembly needs stricter policies governing lawmakers’ behavior not only toward their staff and interns, but also toward lobbyists and others who work there every day.
“There is a serious problem at the Statehouse as it pertains to protecting interns, as it pertains to protecting lobbyists, and protecting other people that deal with that,” he said.
“All INdiana Politics” airs at 9:30 a.m. Sunday on WISH-TV.
Indianapolis, IN
Colts’ Anthony Richardson Ready to Take on Lions Challenge
Anthony Richardson’s return as the starting quarterback of the Indianapolis Colts played out like a movie last Sunday afternoon.
After being benched two weeks prior, putting his future with the team that drafted him No.4 overall in jeopardy, Richardson was reinserted into the starting lineup and produced the best game of his career. The young quarterback finished the game with over 300 total yards and three touchdowns to will the Colts to a 28-27 victory over the New York Jets.
It has been widely documented that the Colts benched Richardson due to a lack of preparation and attention to detail. Shane Steichen and the Colts coaching staff expected more out of Richardson and believed he needed to develop as a pro before seeing the field again.
Richardson took the message to heart and went to work, making great strides in a short amount of time to show he could go the extra mile and make the sacrifices necessary to be the leader of this team. The preparation and new approach during the week paid dividends, as evident by his performance on Sunday.
As the Colts prepare to take on the 9-1 Detroit Lions at Lucas Oil Stadium, Richardson is building on his preparation habits from last week and hoping to produce similar results.
“The main thing is just being consistent,” Richardson said when asked what he is focusing on this week. “Just trusting my guys each and every play, trusting the play call each and every play, and then just trusting the preparation – just putting in the work throughout the week and just letting it show out on the field on Sundays.”
Richardson revealed after the game that it was the most relaxed he has ever felt on the field. He was able to succeed both on the ground and through the air. Richardson was not pressing; instead, he trusted his preparation and made decisive reads, allowing him to deliver the football accurately to his receivers.
It is no coincidence the best game of Richardson’s young career came after a more detailed approach to his preparation was implemented. When asked what was different in his preparation, Richardson pointed to one thing in particular.
“I’d probably say my focus,” Richardson admitted. “I was trying to focus on all the little things a little bit more, just be consistent throughout it. That was really the main thing I was focused on, just trying to make sure I was detailing up the small things and just being consistent.”
For all of the good Richardson did last week, the quarterback is not a finished product. He still has plenty of things to clean up with his game. There were a few throws in the short area of the field that he missed as well as some zone reads that he would like to have back.
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However, the biggest area Richardson wants to improve on is ball security. Failing to protect the football or putting it in harm’s way is a recipe for losing games. And after putting the ball on the ground twice against the Jets, Richardson wants to ensure he is taking better care of the football.
“I had two fumbles throughout the game,” Richardson remarked. “So, definitely trying to keep the ball in our hands, and pushing the ball down the field and moving the ball. But just being consistent with that, and just having a clean game with no turnovers.”
Richardson’s Colts teammates never wavered in their support for the quarterback throughout his benching, and his big game against the Jets only strengthened their confidence in #5. That confidence will serve Indy well this weekend against a Lions team outscoring its opponents by an average of 15.9 points per game.
As Steichen has been saying all season, this team is a resilient bunch. Richardson believes they will need that toughness and resiliency on Sunday.
“Just seeing the toughness from our team. We’re definitely trying to carry that over because we know we’re getting ready to play a physical team,” Richardson explained. “So, they’re going to bring it to us. We got to bring it to them.
“But just trusting my guys each and every play, like I did in that fourth quarter, and just trust in my ability. I feel like I’m a decent football player, and I like to make plays out there. And we had the opportunity to do so, and then my guys just helped me out and we just made it happen.”
Richardson will take on a Lions’ defense that gives up the sixth-most passing yards per game (232.7) but allows the fifth-fewest yards on the ground (94.8). While the quarterback run game was successful against the Jets, Richardson may have to do most of his damage with his arm. The Lions also thrive on taking the ball away, tied for fifth in the league with 19 takeaways.
While protecting the football will be key, Richardson has noticed something about the Lions’ defense that Indy will need to counteract if they want to win.
“The physicality. That was one of the main things I mentioned earlier,” Richardson mentioned. “Their front four or five guys are definitely physical. Linebackers flow pretty fast, and then their DBs like to play man and get physical on the receivers. So that’s what we’ve been talking about all week – just being physical and just bringing it to them.”
The Lions are the hottest team in the NFL, and it will be an immense challenge for the Colts to come out on top. But if you ask Richardson if he is worried about the challenge, the answer is simple. He believes his team can get the job done.
“No concerns, honestly,” Richardson declared. “Every week you’re playing a great team, but we all know like this is a pretty good team that we’re getting ready to go up against. But I feel like we’re a great team as well. So, we’ve just got to prepare like that and just get ready to go out there and compete.”
Not many people are expecting the Colts to beat the Lions on Sunday. However, not many expected Richardson to have the best performance of his career off a two-week benching.
Crazier things have happened, and with Richardson back and leading this team, the Colts always have a shot at victory.
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