Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis drivers navigate snowy roads
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Indianapolis drivers fought through snowy conditions on many roads Monday after the city was hit with 7-10 inches of snow.
News 8 caught up with one of Indiana’s newest Hoosiers at a gas station on Monday evening, when he learned he had a flat tire after his first big snowstorm as a one-month resident of Indiana. Edwin Maldonado moved from Orlando, so the winter storm was quite the transition.
“It just kinda feels like the ‘Matrix’ when you’re driving in snow,” Maldonado said. “Everything is kinda moving in slow motion. I haven’t really experienced icy roads since I’ve been here. This is kinda the first time I’ve experienced really snowy conditions and then I have a flat tire, so that’s just the cherry on top of it all.”
Maldonado says the roads could have been better treated in some areas. “I feel like they’ve done a pretty good job with main roads but then going into neighborhoods, that are also frequently busy roads, they definitely could be plowing.”
Most city roads were bad Monday with just the main thoroughfares plowed.
The Indianapolis Department of Public Works says it has approximately 70 drivers working around the clock in 12-hour shifts.
Kyle Bloyd, chief communication officer for the Indianapolis Department of Public Works, said Monday, “The square mileage of Indianapolis is quite large, and we’re dealing with this wind as well. A driver can plow these thoroughfares and by the next time they come around their work has already been undone.”
The city has an interactive map showing which roads are being prioritized over others for plowing.
Indianapolis, IN
‘I’m appalled’: Hundreds in Indianapolis protest ICE
Indianapolis ICE protest
Several hundred protestors gathered on Monument Circle to oppose the federal government’s immigration crackdown.
Several hundred people rallied against ICE on Monument Circle in downtown Indianapolis on Jan. 31 as part of a wave of protests across the nation this weekend.
Many of the protesters expressed anger over the recent fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good by federal agents in Minneapolis, where the Trump administration has deployed a surge of immigration agents as part of a federal crackdown.
Protesters carried anti-ICE signs and chanted “ICE out” as they marched, drawing supportive honks from motorists. The rally was one of several planned across the city, including a smaller gathering near the Governor’s mansion.
Jennifer Yumib, 64, of Indianapolis, said she braved temperatures in the teens because of how strongly she feels.
“I’m appalled by what’s been happening in our country,” she said. “Seeing people torn from their homes without cause. People shot in the streets for trying to help others. This is not what we should be as a country.”
Brooke Verhey, 28, of Indianapolis, attended the rally with her dog, Raine, who wore a “F— Ice” sign. She said she believes ICE’s actions are unconstitutional.
“They are detaining peaceful protesters and trying to take their phones,” she said. “People have a right to record.”
Phil Slates, 75, of Indianapolis, carried a sign saying, “ICE melts under resistance.” He called the immigration enforcement agency’s treatment of people “inhuman.”
“I don’t believe anybody disagrees that we should have legitimate immigration policy,” he said. “The issue is how people are being ripped out of their homes — people who don’t have a criminal record. This is nothing but intimidation.”
The rally was one of many across the nation and followed a vigil the night before at New Liberty Mission Baptist Church for those killed by ICE, which drew an overflow crowd.
Contact IndyStar reporter Tony Cook at 317-444-6081 or tony.cook@indystar.com. Follow him on X@IndyStarTony and Bluesky @tonycook317.bsky.social.
Indianapolis, IN
Paw Patrol exhibit returns to children’s museum in Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) –The Children’s Museum is set to open a brand new Paw Patrol exhibit on Sunday and it’ll remain open until May 25th.
The exhibit is all about connecting kids to their favorite puppy powered heroes.
The exhibit was at the museum back in 2019 and after traveling around the country, it is back inside the museum.
Kids will be able to meet their favorite pups! Kid-size sculptures of Marshall, Chase, Skye, Rubble, Everest, Rocky, Zuma, and Tracker are found throughout the exhibit. It also features multiple areas including the Lookout Tower, Adventure Bay, Porter’s Cafe and also Jake’s Mountain.
“The exhibit is all about learning about teamwork, problem solving, and overcoming obstacles and while they’re doing the fun interactive they’re working on their social, emotional and cognitive gross motor skills,” said Sarah Myers, Director of Traveling Exhibits, Children’s Museum of Indianapolis
Myers said her favorite part of the exhibit is when the kids get to meet their favorite Paw Patrol hero.
“It’s great to see the little kids get to meet their characters for the first time in 3D,” said Myers.
For more information on this exhibit, visit here.
Indianapolis, IN
A Facebook post alleges BRICS supports ICE. The owners want to clear that up
What rights do students have to participate in a protest walkout?
Thousands of students across the country are protesting ICE and the Trump administration by staging school walkouts. What to know about students’ rights.
A Broad Ripple ice cream shop found itself under fire on social media this week after one its owners posted in support of Immigration Customs and Enforcement, prompting many to pledge to stop supporting the business.
The social media ordeal in which the store BRICS found itself raises the question of whether small businesses should publicly take sides on political and civil issues and how much a business owner’s politics should dictate whether one supports the business or not.
In a lengthy interview Jan. 30 with the IndyStar, the BRICS owners said the post on the personal Facebook page of the spouse of a minority owner did not represent the sentiment of BRICS ownership. However, they say, they will not release a statement against ICE, either, preferring to remain political neutral to operate as a safe third space for people on all sides of the debate.
“We feel very differently from what was posted,” said David Vonnegut-Gabovitch, the majority owner of BRICS. “But our concern was that if our statement says we feel totally the opposite, then everybody on the other side starts going the other way.”
That was not enough for Jen Colson Estes, a Meridian-Kessler resident, who first called out the shop on social media for a Facebook post she saw made by Jenny DuBow, spouse of BRICS co-owner David DuBow. As ICE enforcement in the country has ramped up, Colson Estes posted on her personal Facebook page that she would not visit the ice cream shop because of the post.
“She has the right to post it, and we have the right to never go there again,” Colson Estes told IndyStar.
Soon after Colson Estes’s initial post on Jan. 29, it went viral on Indianapolis social media, circulating in north side, Midtown and food-focused Facebook groups. Jenny DuBow’s profile has since been made private, but screenshots on Facebook and confirmed by BRICS ownership show she reposted an “I Stand With ICE” image.
BRICS released a statement on Facebook on Jan. 30, saying that the statement did not reflect the store’s beliefs.
“We regret that posts made on a personal social media account and circulated have been attributed to our business – this is not us!” the statement read.
Vonnegut-Gabovitch, Kirstie Hileman and David DuBow co-own BRICS, which has operated along the Monon Trail in Broad Ripple for 15 years. Vonnegut-Gabovitch holds the majority stake in the company, 70%, with Hileman and DuBow having a minority stake of 20% and 10%, respectively. The three run the day-to-day operations of the company, they told IndyStar.
Yet, the names of their spouses, Jennifer DuBow and Nonie Vonnegut-Gabovitch, appear on BRICS’ website. The two are not involved in the store’s operation of the store and cannot speak for it, the three principals say.
The statement did little to calm the flames. In an interview with IndyStar, Hileman said BRICS fielded about 15 phone calls on Friday and several more the day before as the post spread. David DuBow was not present at the interview but Vonnegut-Gabovitch and Hileman said they were speaking for him as well.
The owners said they made a conscious decision not to simply write a statement decrying ICE.
“It would have likely been easier for us to just make an apology and make a political statement, but we don’t think that’s the best way,” Hileman said. “If we’re removing businesses’ right to remain neutral and be a third safe space, how is it that our public will ever be able to have safe discourse?”
That said, they are making a concerted effort to tell longtime customers and community partners that their individual views in no way align with the controversial post. Hileman and Vonnegut-Gabovitch said in an interview with IndyStar that the views of the three owners, including David DuBow, are “wildly different” than the views expressed in the post.
“It’s not something any of us were involved in, not something any of us believe, but we do respect her First Amendment right,” Vonnegut-Gabovitch said. “She has a right to her views, and I believe we couldn’t change that.”
The flap started a day before thousands of businesses across the country closed their doors in a nationwide protest of ICE sparked by agents’ fatal shooting of two U.S. citizens, 37-year-olds Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti, in Minneapolis earlier this month.
Several Indianapolis businesses around town posted they would participate while others announced they would donate to causes that support undocumented immigrants.
Instead of taking to social media to take a side on ICE, the BRICS owners are encouraging people to visit the shop and have face-to-face conversations with the owners and with one another. On the afternoon of Jan. 30, the shop was quiet, with a few adults and children spread out eating ice cream.
“We want to bring it down at least for us, at least within our four walls, on our social media, bring that temperature down and move on and serve ice cream,” Vonnegut-Gabovitch said.
Alysa Guffey writes business, health and development stories for IndyStar. Have a story tip? Contact her at amguffey@usatodayco.com or on X: @AlysaGuffeyNews.
-
Pennsylvania6 days agoRare ‘avalanche’ blocks Pennsylvania road during major snowstorm
-
Technology1 week agoRing claims it’s not giving ICE access to its cameras
-
Tennessee1 day agoUPDATE: Ohio woman charged in shooting death of West TN deputy
-
Movie Reviews5 days agoVikram Prabhu’s Sirai Telugu Dubbed OTT Movie Review and Rating
-
News1 week agoVideo: Jack Smith Defends His Trump Indictments During House Hearing
-
Politics1 week agoWhite House explains bruise on Trump’s hand
-
Politics7 days agoTrump’s playbook falters in crisis response to Minneapolis shooting
-
Massachusetts11 hours agoTV star fisherman, crew all presumed dead after boat sinks off Massachusetts coast