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City of Bloomington, Indiana

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Search Results: (7)

closed #163807

Potholes, Other Street Repair

8111 S Strain Ridge RD

Case Date:
4/1/2018

Several potholes with one especially deep and dangerous

closed #164567

Other

1274 E Marigold RD

Case Date:
5/25/2018

Hi. Why have city workers been putting utility location flags all over my yard?

closed #193142

Yard Waste

7005 S Ketcham RD

Case Date:
8/26/2024

We were told that COB along with Monroe County would be working to collect excess tree debris from the July storms. We followed what was asked and submitted a form(case #192173) and placed it all on the side of the road next to our driveway. My husband saw the people come by on the day we were scheduled and they picked up some stuff on the OPPOSITE side of the road(directly across from our house where there is no house) and left everything next to our driveway along with the debris next to our mailbox. They seemed to have picked up a small amount of the debris next to the mailbox but not all of it. My husband checked and our case is now 'Closed' but it only lists anonymous. So someone skipped us or just didn't do it and then closed out our ticket with no reason. We would like someone to come out and collect. Thank you

closed #202531

Excessive Growth

1188 W Popcorn RD

Case Date:
5/7/2025

House abandoned. Yard taken over by weeds and grass.

closed #203533

Street Trees

515 E Monroe Dam RD

Case Date:
6/18/2025

Trees are down blocking this road.

closed #204053

Water Quality

4160 E Ramp Creek RD

Case Date:
7/8/2025

Water is brown and staining everthing!

open #206252

Excessive Growth

7470 S Shields Ridge RD

Case Date:
10/11/2025

Bradford Pears (invasive species) located at Monroe Water Treatment Plant. The two trees are located at the discharge point of a surface drain. More importantly, the trees are located directly adjacent to the Hoosier National Forest, which is just a mere 50ft away (across Shady Side Dr). Currently, the trees are bearing fruit. It appears that these fruits' seeds have the opportunity to traverse the slope and end up in our watershed, tainting the Hoosier National Forest, as an invasive species. The trees should be removed ASAP, as part of the City's initiative to systematically remove Bradford Pear trees from public property. Given the proximity to the National Forest and in the confines of the Lake Monroe watershed, this is a priority site.