WFHB Local News

WFHB Local News – March 26th, 2026


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This is the WFHB Local News for Thursday, March 26th, 2026.

In today’s newscast, WFHB Correspondent Camdyn Glover speaks with residents of Bloomington and a healthcare professional to gather community reactions to the ongoing trial of Luigi Mangione. More in today’s feature report.

Also coming up in the next half hour, WFHB Sports Correspondent Chase Dodson brings you today’s Sports News Briefing – a rundown of local, state and national sports news.

Bloomington City Council postpones Hopewell South PUD 

Photo by Jessie Grubb.

The Hopewell South project has been further delayed by the Bloomington City Council.

During last night’s meeting, the council postponed the Hopewell South planned unit development, or PUD, by a 6-3 vote. This is the second time the council delayed the vote on Hopewell South.

The Hopewell project is a city-led redevelopment on the old IU Health hospital site. Proponents of Hopewell say it will drive more affordable housing to Bloomington. Mayor Kerry Thomson has made Hopewell a center piece on how she hopes the city will address housing needs.

Mayor Thomson spoke to councilmembers last night calling Hopewell, “a once in a lifetime opportunity for this community.”

“What builds housing and what improves community is the decision to work together in good faith with great planning for the common good,” said Thomson.

Councilmember Isabel Piedmont-Smith says she supports the project as a whole – but she believes the city could push for more affordable options for Hopewell if given the time.

“With all due respect, we are asserting our prerogative and our legal right to try to make this project even better. So I am opposed to voting on this tonight,” said Piedmont-Smith.

The council will revisit the agenda item during its next meeting on April 1st. Stay tuned to the WFHB Local News next week for more coverage on last night’s city council meeting.

After lockout, Monroe County women’s commission meets on ‘Women in Government Plaza’

The “Women in Government Plaza” on the south side of the Monroe County courthouse in downtown Bloomington. (Dave Askins, March 24, 2026)

On March 19 at 5:30 p.m., members of the Monroe County women’s commission arrived for a legally advertised public meeting at the historic county courthouse and found the building locked.

After being let inside, they were told they could not use their regular meeting space, which is the Nat U. Hill room, because their meeting was not on the county’s digital calendar. The Nat U. Hill room is the same place where the county commissioners and the county council meet.

The group managed to hold its regular monthly meeting anyway—in a location that framed the incident with some irony. They met outdoors on the small plaza south of the courthouse, where limestone benches were installed in 2015 in part to commemorate the late county councilor, Sophia Travis.

The literal name of the plaza is more general: “Women in Government Plaza.” The plaza is dedicated to “women’s service in government, past, present, and future.”

Monroe County officials say they will review internal procedures and have given assurances that such a locked-door situation won’t happen again.

The lockout incident got some airtime at Tuesday night’s (March 24) meeting of the county council.

From the public mic, women’s commission president Susan Hingle briefed councilors on what happened. The meeting had been properly noticed under Indiana’s Open Door Law, but when members of the commission arrived, the building was locked; after they were let in, they were told they could not remain in their regular meeting room because the meeting was not on the county’s internal calendar. With a quorum present and the meeting properly noticed, the commission chose to meet outside on the benches of the “Women in Government Plaza.”

Hingle told the council the episode highlighted “the fragility of the systems that support boards and commissions.” She stressed the commission had followed the law and still could not rely on basic access to a public meeting space

Women’s commissioner Maria Douglas followed Hingle by linking the lockout to a longer pattern where the commission has been “largely underutilized,” even as commissioners attend meetings, participate in justice reform work, and develop tools like a gender‑equity rubric meant to help evaluate the impact of county policies on women and marginalized genders. The gender-equity guidelines were presented to the Monroe County commissioner by women’s commissioner Julie Hardesty on March 12.

Both Douglas and Hingle asked county officials to tighten internal processes so a properly noticed public meeting cannot be displaced by a calendaring error, and to more clearly affirm that logistical support—room access, calendaring, coordination—is a core obligation, not an optional courtesy.

County attorney Molly Turner‑King told councilors that the county’s technical services department had acknowledged the incident as an oversight.

Turner-King said confusion arose partly because most boards and commissions adopt an annual meeting schedule that staff then load into the county calendar; the women’s commission had not yet adopted such a schedule for the year. Turner‑King framed that as context, not a criticism of the commission.

Council president Jennifer Crossley pressed the question of whether anyone had explicitly apologized. Turner‑King said she believed county commissioner Jody Madeira had contacted the commission that night but did not have full details. Madeira is the county commissioner ex officio member of the women’s commission.

Addressing the members of the women’s commission at Tuesday’s meeting, Crossley said:

And we want you all, because we have council appointments as well, want to make sure that we have an understanding that we don’t want you all to feel like this is something that is completely intentional. And being a liaison to the boards and commission or the women’s commission before, and seeing some of the past history. We don’t want to make you all feel that way at all, and I hope you all hear the sincerity and our voices that you know we will work to rectify the situation.

Commissioner Jody Madeira then weighed in remotely via a Microsoft Teams connection, to give an assurance that what unfolded last week would not happen again:

And just to confirm yes, it was very, very unfortunate—it will definitely not happen again. We don’t want any commission to feel disparaged. We don’t want anyone to show up and feel that their time was wasted. And it was very unfortunate. I could not attend that meeting, since I was on the road. And for the meeting, it was absolutely properly noticed, and we will absolutely get to the bottom of what happened and make sure that that does not happen again.

During the period for county councilor comments towards the end of the county council meeting, councilor David Henry used the incident to raise broader concerns about how Monroe County treats its boards and commissions. He said, “It sends the message that this work is optional or incidental, rather than an essential part of county governance.” Henry pointed to problems with other bodies, noting the Emergency Management Advisory Council (EMAC) had twice failed to reach a quorum and had not held a formal meeting since October last year.

Henry also said he’d reviewed the profile of county board and commission appointees, which he said showed that boards and commissions are “mostly white, mostly over the age of 65, mostly men, and mostly people that own houses … [worth] half a million dollars or more.” In that context, Henry said, it is especially troubling if a more diverse body like the women’s commission feels sidelined.

This headline was produced by the B Square Bulletin. For more information, tap this link.

Featured Segments:

Luigi Mangione appears at a hearing at Manhattan Criminal Court on February 21, 2025 in New York City. Curtis Means/Pool/Getty Images

The story of Luigi Mangione has sparked controversy nationwide. Mangione is perhaps one of the most polarizing murder suspects in recent history. In today’s feature report, WFHB Correspondent Camdyn Glover speaks with residents of Bloomington and a healthcare professional to gather community reactions to the ongoing trial of Mangione. That’s coming up next on the Local News.

Now, we turn to WFHB Sports Correspondent Chase Dodson who brings you today’s Sports News Briefing – a rundown of local, state and national sports news. That’s coming up next on WFHB.

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 produced today’s edition of B Square Bites.
Our feature was produced by Camdyn Glover.
Chase Dodson produced today’s sports briefing.
Our theme music is provided by Mark Bingham and the Social Climbers.
Engineer and Executive producer is Kade Young.

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