WFHB Local News

WFHB Local News – March 25th, 2026


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This is the WFHB Local News for Wednesday, March 25th, 2026.

In today’s newscast, the MCCSC Board of Trustees voted to sell the former Herald Times building during their meeting last night. More in today’s headlines.

Also coming up in the next half hour, “Rogue’s Gallery” – a classic edition of Better Beware, your weekly consumer-watchdog segment on the WFHB Local News.

MCCSC votes to sell former Herald-Times building

The Herald-Times building at 1900 S. Walnut St. was built in 1961. Printing operations moved to Indianapolis in 2020, and the news staff moved to a smaller location in 2022. | Limestone Post

Last night, the Monroe County Community School Corporation Board of Trustees voted unanimously to sell the former Herald-Times building.

Board members cited the cost of renovations as too high to justify keeping it. As required by the state, the board held a public hearing during last night’s meeting. No one gave public comments.

School board president Erin Cooperman says she was initially excited about the idea of using the space; however, she says the financial situation of the school corporation has changed since purchasing the property in 2022.

“I think that this is sort of, for me, a sad symbol of how much our financial situation has changed since we decided to buy the property,” said Cooperman.

Chief Financial Officer Matt Irwin said the cost to renovate the building would be too high and limit their ability to make other improvements across the school system.

“It would limit our ability to make other necessary improvements that are wanted and needed at some of our other facilities,” said Irwin.

The process of selling the building is underway. The MCCSC Board of Trustees will meet again on April 28th.

Monroe County test run clears voting machines for May 5 primary

Top: Bob White, owner of B&L IT Services, briefs observers about the logic and accuracy test for election equipment. Standing in the background are Monroe County election supervisor Kylie Farris and Monroe County clerk, Nicole Browne. Bottom: Election staff feed test ballots into the scanners. (Dave Askins, March 24, 2026)

Monroe County’s voting equipment passed a routine logic and accuracy test Tuesday morning, clearing a key procedural task ahead of the May 5 primary election.

Briefing observers of the equipment test was Bob White, owner of B&L IT Services, which has been used as an election equipment consultant by Monroe County government since about 2013. His work includes equipment testing, polling logistics, and troubleshooting. White serves as a key local point of contact for county election staff and for employees of the Hart InterCivic, which manufactures the voting machines the county uses for its elections.

The basic idea of Tuesday morning’s test was to run thousands of pre-marked test ballots through a randomly selected set of scanners used on Election Day to verify that the optical readers and software will count votes correctly.

A few hours later, Monroe County election supervisor Kylie Farris, confirmed to The B Square that the equipment had passed muster.

White told observers of Tuesday’s event was his 19th logic and accuracy test for the county. For this round, a test deck of around 4,000 computer-generated ballots was used, designed to test every contest, every ballot style, and every kind of voting scenario the system might encounter on Election Day.

“What the computer does is it votes every ballot style, every contest on every ballot style, and all of our precincts and polling locations on every ballot,” White said.

The test deck covers everything from blank ballots to under-votes (where a voter chooses fewer candidates than allowed) to over-votes (where a voter chooses too many).

During the public test, staff in the election division fed the test ballots into the six different randomly selected tabulators. White warned that 70–80% of the ballots would be rejected on the first pass—not because the equipment is malfunctioning, but because the test deck is intentionally designed to produce all the common problem scenarios.

Rejected ballots are returned with messages such as “blank ballot” or “over-vote.” In real elections, voters can choose to correct their ballot or accept it as-is. For the test, staff just accepted the ballots as scanned.

Once the initial scanners read the ballots, reports with the tallies are generated. Those results are then compared against a pre-computed set of expected results generated by the Hart Intercivic, the voting machine manufacturer.

Observers asked how ballots that are rejected with errors are handled, especially during early voting. White explained that early in-person ballots are placed in a ballot box and later scanned in bulk with high-speed scanners, which means an early voter doesn’t have a chance to re-vote their ballot.

But ballots that the high-speed scanner flags for issues—such as ambiguous marks or over-votes—are sent to the county election board for adjudication on Election Day. Board members review enlarged images of the ballots and try to determine voter intent. If they conclude that a contest is in fact an over-vote, for example, that specific race is not counted, but the rest of the ballot still counts.

The test was conducted under bipartisan oversight. Monroe County Democratic Party chair Chrissie Geels and vice chair Rob Council both attended. Vice chair of the Monroe County Republican Party Noelle Conyer attended. All three election board members were present: Monroe County clerk Nicole Browne, GOP appointee Danny Shields, and Democratic Party appointee Penny Githens.

Election board members signed the official IEC-9 form, which certifies that the equipment passed the test.

Have a listen to what democracy sounded like on Tuesday morning.

https://wfhb.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cropped-Election-equipment-2026_03_24_09_32_07_1-1.mp3

The logic and accuracy test is part of the county’s preparation for the May 5 primary election. Early voting begins April 7. The last day to register to vote is April 6. The state of Indiana offers an online voter registration service.

That headline came from Dave Askins of the B Square Bulletin. For more local news coverage, you can visit this link.

City to remove less mature oak trees than originally planned on East Side

BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA – Stumps remain where the State of Indiana’s INDOT had trees cut down along Pete Ellis Drive, on Tuesday, March 24, 2026 in Bloomington, Indiana. Some other trees along 10th and further south on Pete Ellis are also marked to be cut down. (Photo by Jeremy Hogan/The Bloomingtonian)

City of Bloomington officials say fewer trees will be removed along Pete Ellis Drive after an agreement with the Indiana Department of Transportation.

INDOT told the city that up to 15 trees could be removed as part of construction near the Pete Ellis Drive post office. After public concern, that number is now seven, according to a city press release.

The topic received some attention from the city’s public works board on March 24th. Senior Project Engineer Neil Kopper says the issue has drawn increased public attention in recent weeks.

“An aspect of this project that has gotten a lot of public attention is the plan to remove 15 mature oak trees on the south side of SR 45 on Pete Ellis,” said Kopper. “We’ve had significant coordination with INDOT, and we are going to be able to save eight of those 15 trees.”

Board President Kyla Cox Deckard asked whether INDOT plans to plant new trees that avoid right-of-way interference. Kopper responded.

“There are some replacements, but not to a scale that we want. That agreement hasn’t been reached yet, but we do have the ability and the intention of replanting some trees there,” he said.

Tree removal is expected to be complete before April 1st.

Featured Segments:


In today’s feature report, Bring It On hosts Clarence Boone and Liz Mitchell honor Women’s History Month with an evening centered on Black women. They speak with Dominique Borneman, founder of Midwest Sister Circle Inc., a community of hope and restoration promoting education, advocacy, and connection for women across Central Indiana; and Danielle Willis, founder of Dynasty Haven, a non-medical caregiving agency providing personalized in-home care, wellness check- ins, and support services that empower individuals to age with dignity.

Bring It On airs every Monday at 6 p.m. on WFHB. To listen to the full interview, visit this link.

Up next, “Rogue’s Gallery 1” – a classic edition of Better Beware, your weekly consumer-watchdog segment on the WFHB Local News. We turn to host and producer Richard Fish for more.

Credits:

You’ve been listening to the WFHB Local News,
Today’s headlines were written by Kade Young, in partnership with Cats – Community Access Television Services.
Dave Askins of the B Square Bulletin produced today’s headline on Monroe County’s voting machines.
Our feature was produced by Clarence Boone.
Better Beware is produced by Richard Fish.
Our theme music is provided by Mark Bingham and the Social Climbers.
Engineer and Executive producer is Kade Young.

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