Little Cousin Jasper Parade
Many people lined Washington Street on Saturday for the Little Cousin Jasper Festival parade.
After the very loud fire trucks passed, the Cousin Jasper King and Queen for 2024 rode by.
These marchers were handing out popcorn. They were from ConAgra.
The Rensselaer Care Center had a float with two kids on it.
The Rensselaer marching band was the only band in the parade this year.
The Republicans had a float with lots of signs for its candidates for County, State, and National offices.
I do not remember who sponsored this float, but it commemorated the 50 years that the Little Cousin Jasper Festival has been around.
Youth soccer has a lot of kids in its program and the younger ones were on a float. Some of the older ones were marching behind, throwing out candy. There was a lot of candy this year, and any kid who did not go home with a big bag of it was a slacker.
I did not quickly recognize what the woman on the right was supposed to be. She was a toothbrush and represented one of our local dentists.
Donaldson's had a colorful float.
The Democrats have fewer candidates running for local offices than the Republicans. Neither Luttringer nor Jeffries ran in the primary election.
At the end of the parade was a strange three-wheeled vehicle and a car that looked like it had been in a demolition derby.
More Festival pictures
The Carnegie Players put on several performances of what they called "Professor Galen Placebo's Miracle Elixir Medicine Show". Here Professor Galen demonstrated how his miracle elixir was keeping a head without a body alive.
The show also had a magician trying to perform tricks. Here she is with Ima Lone and her assistant Lotta Tusch.
The whole thing was very funny but the sound from the main stage was distracting. Hopefully they will be able to perform it again in a better venue.
Two of the actors shown in these pictures will be performing on September 21 at the Memories Alive at Weston Cemetery.
The stage show that had the loud sound was a hypnotist.
I paid a last visit as the Festival was closing and was surprised at how many people were still there. I saw a bunch of kids wearing these hats that had bulbs in the legs. When they were squeezed, the ears moved.
Board of Public Works meeting
The Board of Public Works meeting had only one item on its agenda, a payment of $20,572 for Commonwealth Engineering for its work on the Water Project. It was approved.
The fence around the water treatment plant next to Iroquois Park is finished. The City has started filling the I-65 water tower. The generator for the water towers passed their tests. Work has started on the permeable pavers along Harrison Street. The new police cars are still not ready to enter service.
Rensselaer City Council meeting
The Council passed on a second reading of an ordinance for discontinuation of services. There were a few minor changes and clarifications made to it. The gas tracker for September did not change. The Mayor issued a proclamation for the Knights of Columbus' Blue Light Program. It honors first responders by encouraging people to light a blue light on September 11, which was proclaimed Blue Light Day.
The Council approved starting to prepare for closing the Scott Street rail crossing. There will be a public hearing on October 14.
The Council then heard presentations for Commonwealth Engineering and Baker Tilley about making improvements to the sewage system to comply with a State decree. The City has until 2030 to make these improvements. It had sought financing from the State Revolving Fund (SRF) for zero percent financing, but initially did not make the cut. However, several localities that were above it in the rankings were not ready to begin their projects, so the cut line dropped down until it included Rensselaer. Rensselaer can borrow up to $20 million at the zero interest rate and Commonwealth expects the changes to the sewage plant to be $18.8 million. The City also needs to make changes in its sewers within Rensselaer and that is estimated to cost another $8 or $9 million. The speakers kept making references to a packet that the Council members had so the presentations were hard to follow for someone in the audience.
The Baker Tilley presentation ran through the financing numbers and said that the end result would be almost a doubling of sewage rates. The City will not be able to tap into a second zero-interest rate for the second part of the project. Delaying the project will only increase costs and the size of rate hikes, so the Council voted to move forward to seeking the funding and preparing the many steps needed before construction actually begins. The first step will probably be approving a bond ordinance next month.
The Council will have to have its meetings on-line starting next July. It will keep its current audio system, spend $1945 for new video equipment, and use Youtube to stream the meetings. The Council then approved some changes to health insurance and pay. They will be included in the salary ordinance at a future meeting.
Trick and Treat hours will be from 5:00 to 8:00 on October 31.
The EPA is beginning to regulate a contaminate that I did not catch, though it may be PFAS. The City has the opportunity to have testing for it paid by the Indiana Finance Authority, and the Council approved taking the free testing.
Because the second Monday of November is Veterans Day, the first Council meeting in November will be on Tuesday, November 12. The next Council meeting will have a public hearing on the budget. There is a Plan Commission meeting on September 19 and a public hearing on a proposed TIF district on September 30.
Odd and ends
The doors of what used to be Not Your Typical Wingz now have "for rent" signs on them.
At the Rensselaer Redevelopment Commission meeting summarized in the
previous post, there was mention that a Sanborn Insurance map showed that the property on the corner of Clark and Cullen had once had a gas station. I searched the Internet and found a
1921 map that did not have the building, but a map at the Rensselaer Library showed it.
Part of the building was storage for soft drinks. The gas tanks seem to have been located next to Clark. I suppose that is where the pumps were.
In the past the Weston Cemetery Walk (September 21 this year) has had one presenter for each grave visited. This year we will try something different, a conversation among three sisters who died within two years in the late 19th century. All were between the ages of 16 to 22 and their father was a popular craftsman/shopkeeper. I have seen the script and if the three women do as well as they have in rehearsals, it will be a highlight of this year's walk.
Three years ago we featured Ernest Zea as told from the perspective of his mother. Ernie was blind and confined to a wheelchair, but he made the most of what he had and was admired by the citizens of Rensselaer. This year we initially considered another person who had severe physical handicaps and an eventful life. Ultimately we decided not to portray him because, unlike Ernest, he took a destructive path that caused him and others great pain. Which raises the question, are their lives that are so objectionable or offensive that they should be out-of-bounds for an event like the Cemetery Walk? Does the answer depend on whether they have surviving relatives in Rensselaer?
The organizers appreciate the sponsors who make this event possible, including:
I just got booted off of Rensselaer Adventures on Facebook because it was considered Spam😡 Really ! Of all the junk on there this is not one
ReplyDeleteI jus got kicked off of Facebook for sharing Rensselaer Adventures 😡. Really ,of all the junk on Facebook this is not SPAM
ReplyDeleteOur sewer rates are high now.
ReplyDelete