Eastside Market rebrands as People’s Market, moves online during COVID-19 pandemic
This year, people will still have two options for where they can get fresh produce and market products in Bloomington.
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This year, people will still have two options for where they can get fresh produce and market products in Bloomington.
Updated at 9:07 p.m. April 22.
Sydney Reed, 18, holds a rubber bracelet that says "#sydpigstrong" Feb. 16 in her home in Martinsville, Indiana. Sydney was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma when she was 14, and her doctors told her it was caused by environmental factors.
Debbie Corcoran stands in her kitchen and talks to her daughter Sydney Reed on Feb. 16 in Martinsville, Indiana. Debbie's house is located on a chemical plume, which is where chemicals have seeped into the soil and evaporated into the air. She doesn't use tap water anymore and thinks it tastes worse than pennies. Instead, she buys gallons and bottles of water in bulk.
Debbie Corcoran and her daughter Sydney Reed sit in their living room Feb. 16 in Martinsville, Indiana. Sydney was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer, in 2015, and her doctors told her it was caused by environmental factors.
Debbie Corcoran and her daughter Sydney Reed look at chemical plume maps Feb. 16 in their home in Martinsville, Indiana. The chemical plumes are contaminated areas created from improperly disposed chemicals from different companies in the city. One of them runs through their neighborhood.
Debbie Corcoran and her daughter Sydney Reed look at chemical plume maps Feb. 16 in their home in Martinsville, Indiana. The chemical plumes are contaminated areas created from improperly disposed chemicals from different companies in the city.
Snow falls on yellow daffodils on the first day of spring in 2018. In early spring, IU Landscaping Services crew members typically plant pansies, tulips, daffodils and hyacinths.
MARTINSVILLE, Ind. - On Thanksgiving of 2015, Debbie Corcoran watched her daughter pull the hair off her scalp in clumps and pile it next to her plate of turkey and mashed potatoes. Debbie got her a trash can.
IU President Michael McRobbie speaks at the Board of Trustees meeting April 5, 2018, in Alumni Hall. IU plans to ask the Board of Trustees for permission to borrow $1 billion at its board meeting Friday in case of a budget deficit due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bloomington City Council meets April 7 in a videoconference. The council discussed taking funds from the Food and Beverage Tax Fund to help local businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Bloomington City Council approved using funds from the Food and Beverage Tax Fund to help alleviate some financial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on local businesses Tuesday. The appropriation was passed 9-0.
In a typical week, Tracey Sizemore doesn’t have much to worry about. Her car is paid off, and she really only worries about her utility bills.
With the spread of COVID-19 and a stay-at-home order in Indiana, those who run the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market had to get creative about how vendors can sell their products.
The IU Board of Trustees meets April 5, 2018, in the Indiana Memorial Union. The IU Trustees election has been postponed one year.
Over the past few weeks, stores have struggled to keep toilet paper, sanitary wipes and hand sanitizer on shelves. The same has been happening with diapers and baby wipes, but local Bloomington and Monroe County organizations are working to make sure families have what they need to take care of their babies.
As COVID-19 continues to spread throughout the U.S., businesses and restaurants are coming up with up with ways to keep their businesses afloat.
As cases of COVID-19 continue to pop up in Indiana and people are being ordered to stay indoors, city officials said people will have to prepare for the situation to get worse before it gets better.
Gov. Eric Holcomb told Hoosiers to stay at home to slow the spread of the coronavirus during a state address Monday. The new executive order to stay home goes from 11:59 p.m. March 24 to 11:59 p.m. April 6.
An IU graduate stands with other active military members and veterans who attend IU on May 4, 2019, during the graduation ceremony at Memorial Stadium. IU postponed all 2020 spring commencement ceremonies, according to a statement released Friday.