Indianapolis, IN
Proposed ordinance to target late-night food trucks after downtown shooting
INDIANAPOLIS — Indianapolis food truck operators are on edge as the city prepares to introduce a new ordinance that targets food trucks and late-night vendors.
While no official details have been released, city officials have confirmed that a proposal is in the works regarding the trucks at Monday night’s city council meeting.
Police Chief Chris Bailey recently said, “Food trucks are a constant source of issues, especially after the bars close.” He added, “We’re working with City-County Councilors to create an ordinance.”
What exactly the ordinance will include is still unknown. Whether it will limit operating hours, specific streets or the number of trucks permitted downtown has not been clarified.
For local food truck owner A.J. Feeney-Ruiz, the uncertainty itself poses a serious threat to his business.
“Restrictions on downtown food trucks would devastate us,” said Feeney-Ruiz, who owns Bread Books Bourbon and Bacon. “Late night is our business, and we’ve built it for five years and never had a single issue.”
Feeney-Ruiz said his truck has served late-night crowds on Mass Ave for years, and he sees the business as part of the downtown ecosystem, not a problem.
“People have always wanted food after bars before food trucks, it was hot dog carts, diners, 24-hour spots,” he said. “We provide safe, affordable food when nothing else is open.”
Feeney-Ruiz acknowledges that downtown violence is a real concern, especially in the Mile Square area, but he argues that food trucks are not the root cause.
“If they want to put limits on the trucks, it should be in the Mile Square area,” said Ruiz. “We have never had an issue on Mass Ave.”
The city says a proposal will be introduced in the coming weeks, but until then, the future of late-night vending downtown remains unclear.
Indianapolis, IN
Philip Rivers fell one throw short of storybook ending in his couch-to-Colts return
He had one last throw left in that 44-year-old wing of his. For most of the afternoon, he’d been able to fool Father Time and frighten 68,771 Seattle Seahawks fans inside Lumen Field who’d come to bury Philip Rivers and, instead, watched him push their football team to the very brink of an impossible upset.
There had been a moment when it seemed Rivers might actually pull off the damn thing, too. That was with 1 minute and 55 seconds left in the game. The Colts led for so much of the game and were behind Seattle 15-13, but the ball was in the old man’s hands now. All day, he’d been careful and efficient. It got him a 13-3 lead at one point. Now, he needed to make a play.
And damned if he didn’t make a play.
Damned if he didn’t throw a 16-yard back-shoulder special to wide receiver Alec Pierce. Damned if that ball didn’t mean the Seahawks were now going to burn all of their timeouts because, in the NFL in 2025, just making it past midfield — as that throw did — means you’re in field goal range.
Indianapolis, IN
Philip Rivers comes out of retirement for Indianapolis Colts: NFL world reacts
The Indianapolis Colts have cooled considerably as the season has progressed, going from the NFL’s best record to out of the playoff picture entering Week 15 action.
But one of today’s notable storylines is the return of quarterback Philip Rivers after five years away from the NFL. He’s on the Colts’ active roster as they prepare to play the Seattle Seahawks.
The 44-year-old was on Lumen Field hours before kickoff, taking mental reps.
Colts QB Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending injury last week, and backup Riley Leonard suffered a knee injury, though he remains on the active roster. With Brett Rypien the only other QB on their roster and list of available QBs lacking, the Colts called the last signal-caller to lead them in a playoff game (after the 2020 season).
His comeback has piqued the interest of a former Colts coach and players, his former teammates on the Chargers, former NFL quarterbacks and even those from outside football.
Reaction to Philip Rivers being on the Indianapolis Colts today
Joel A. Erickson and Nathan Brown cover the Colts all season. Get more coverage on IndyStarTV and with the Colts Insider newsletter.
Indianapolis, IN
How much snow did Indiana get? Snow totals for Dec. 13
As snow begins to taper off through Indiana, the National Weather Service has begun receiving reports of snow totals.
Here’s how much snow has been reported so far on Dec. 13, according to the NWS.
Snow totals in the Indianapolis area
Carmel: 5.8 inches at 8:01 p.m.
Cumberland: 5 inches at 7:25 p.m.
Indianapolis International Airport: 5 inches at 7:06 p.m.
Brownsburg: 5.7 inches at 6:37 p.m.
Fishers: 5.5 inches at 6:28 p.m.
Westfield: 5.5 inches at 6:05 p.m.
Franklin: 5.1 inches at 5:26 p.m.
Avon: 4.8 inches at 5:25 p.m.
Downtown Indianapolis: 3.5 inches at 5:10 p.m.
Snow totals around Indiana
Dillsboro: 4.5 inches at 8 p.m.
Nashville: 5.5 inches at 7:40 p.m.
Hope: 5.4 inches at 7:33 p.m.
Greensburg: 5 inches at 7:10 p.m.
Rushville: 5 inches at 6:50 p.m.
Batesville: 4.7 inches at 6:30 p.m.
Selma: 6 inches at 6:20 p.m.
Anderson: 6 inches at 5:56 p.m.
Terre Haute: 5.4 inches at 5:50 p.m.
Thorntown: 6 inches at 5:05 p.m.
(This story will be updated)
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