►
B
A
A
B
Thank
you,
Joe
I'm
personally,
fine
I
feel
fine
I'm
trying
to
adjust
to
the
new
rhythms
of
work
in
the
pandemic
structure,
where
we're
doing
zoom
and
hang
out
Google,
Hangouts
and
and
webex's,
and
all
those
things
all
the
time,
I'm
physically
fine,
you,
you
probably
know
my
wife
is
actually
in
the
hospital.
She's
got
Co
vyd
and
dealing
with
that
in
the
hospital.
So
that's
a
challenge
to
our
household.
It's
pretty
odd
and
Stern
stressful,
not
to
I,
would
want
to
be
in
the
room
24/7.
B
B
Is
well
I
don't
want
to
go
into
all
the
Dia's
she's
in
the
hospital
she's
getting
good
treatment
she's.
You
know
we
were
optimistic
and
she's
a
tough
person
and
strong,
and
but
it's
you
know
it's
it's.
You
know
it's
a
tough
disease
and
I.
Just
can't
thank
enough
that
Jers
and
nurses
and
orderlies,
and
all
the
people
in
the
healthcare
system
who
are
working
so
hard
every
day
to
take
care
of,
take
care
of
dawn
and
people
like
her
here
in
town
and
across
the
country.
Yeah.
A
B
We,
you
know,
as
for
cell
phones
and
email
and
all
that,
but
it's
still
a
little
it
is.
It
is
frustrating
not
to
be
able
to
be
in
the
room
with
the
one
you
love
to
when
they're
going
through
all
this,
but
thank
you
for
asking
and
yeah
we're
we're
confidence.
You're
gonna
pull
through
this
with
the
good
help
of
the
healthcare
system.
B
A
Did
receive
a
lot
of
emails
from
listeners
and
viewers,
so
I
do
want
to
get
to
some
of
those
today,
of
course,
as
many
as
we
can
in
our
short
time
that
we're
allowed.
So,
let's
move
ahead
to
fire
fighters.
Someone
wanted
to
know
about
the
firefighters
that
are
serving
the
county.
If
they
have
some,
they
say,
have
inadequate
personal
protective
equipment
and
are
being
forced
to
share
n95
masks
with
each
other
from
shift
to
shift.
Is
that
happening
so.
B
Departments
the
City
Fire
Department
is
is
adequately
provided
with
the
personal
protective
equipment,
we're
not
sharing
those
kind
of
masks.
We
we're
where
we
feel
good
about
that.
You
may
know
we
had
a
firefighter
who
got
diagnosed
with
kovat,
but
he's
well
and
he's
back
on
the
job
and
the
only
people
who
were
connected
with
him
have
all
been
tested
and
they're
negative,
and
so
so
we
were
really
pleased
with
that.
But
there
are
there
there
may
be
shortages
of
PPE
equipment
in
some
places.
I'm
just
I'm
not
aware
of
those
particulars
how.
B
Yeah,
you
know:
we've
had
precautions
in
place
for
quite
a
number
of
weeks
with
the
police
department.
Our
dispatch
system
started
several
weeks
ago,
trying
to
identify
any
emergency
calls
whether
there
was
a
kovat
risk
in
the
call
both
for
the
police
officers
or
firefighters,
as
well
as
other
individuals,
and
our
officers
have
changed
their
protocols.
They
typically
police
officers,
for
example,
typically
are
not
entering
private
homes.
Now
to
do
interviews
about
a
you
know
something
a
case
report:
they
need
to
do
they're,
they're,
trying
to
avoid
going
into
home.
B
They
have
masks
that
they
use
police
and
fire
when
they're
interacting
with
the
public.
So
those
protocols
are
really
based
on
the
health
department
to
CDC
guidelines
advising
how
we
do
that,
and
we
feel
we
have
the
equipment
that
we
need
to
implement.
That
now
saying
all
that
this
disease
still
gets
around
I
mean
we
do
all
these
things
to
protect
ourselves
and
protect
each
other.
It's
still
a
tricky
disease
that
it's
spreading
and
so
continuing
the
physical
distancing
is
really
important.
Can.
B
B
The
n95
s
and
the
medical
quality
masks
are
really
needed
to
be
reserved
for
the
healthcare
workers,
the
health
care
system
or
nursing
homes
or
those
kind
of
high-risk
places,
but
it
is
encouraged
that
we
use
and
I
do
use
now.
A
homemade
mask
cloth
mask
that
when
I
go
out
again
it's
it,
we
got
to
be
really
careful.
B
A
B
Think
it's
amazing
they're
hundreds
of
people
making
masks
and
we
I
want
to
thank
Jason
where
our
fire
department,
chief,
who,
with
along
with
a
number
of
other
people,
helped
coordinate
and
Alison
jukebox,
we've
kind
of
turned
that
into
a
mask
Factory
in
a
mass
distribution
center.
So
we're
getting
like
a
thousand
mass
a
day
or
some
some
enormous
number
that
these
volunteers
have
been
stitching
around
the
around
the
community.
We
thank
them.
B
A
B
They've
changed
their
protocols,
I
understand
that
they're
actually
still
providing
meals
and
still
doing
some
case
work
with
people,
but
very
different
they're.
Not
all
many
many
people
to
come
in
which,
which
is
important
physical
distancing
about
three
weeks
ago
I
asked
a
group
to
stand
up
together
and
work
on
the
social
safety
net
social
services
that
we
knew
we're
going
to
be
so
important
to
to
strengthen
and
deal
with
this,
and
one
of
the
things
they've
been
looking
at
is
housing.
A
B
A
B
A
Had
a
question
about,
and
I've
had
a
few
of
these
myself
about
the
potential
that
about
loaning
money
for
small
businesses
we
know
just
recently,
there
was
a
two
million
dollars
being
taken
out
of
the
food
and
beverage
tax
to
help
with
loans
for
small
businesses.
Let's
just
start
with
that,
how's
the
response
been
for
those
asking
for
those
loans,
strong.
B
I'm
really
pleased
I
have
to
think
there's
an
economic
stabilization
and
recovery
group
led
by
volunteers
from
the
community
as
well
as
Alex
Crowley.
The
economics
team
will
Dylan
director
and
they've,
been
just
busting
their
tails
for
two
weeks,
solid
to
get
that
money
appropriated
as
well
as
another
half
million
from
the
urban
enterprise
to
stand
up
a
loan
program
and
just
it
just
opened,
Thursday,
I,
believe
and
as
of
today,
I
believe
we
have
31
completed
applications
and
another
100
that
are
in
the
process
of
the
application
for
that
funding.
B
So
we
know
there's
a
real
interest
in
that
a
real
demand
for
it
and
I
just
want
to
thank
all
the
people
are
helping
make
that
happen.
One
other
thing
I
want
to
note
is
we
hope
to.
We
hope
to
be
able
to
leverage
that
money
that
it
may
be
able
to
increase
more
than
just
two
and
a
half
million,
but
to
maybe
double
it
with
some
outside
funding
as
well.
So
we're
working
on
that
still
what's.
A
B
Basically,
a
loan
committee
right,
that's
reviewing
these
the
mix
of
different
volunteers
coming
together
and
let
me
be
clear:
there
are
31
businesses,
who've
gone
all
the
way
through
the
application
and
have
a
completed
application
in
front
of
that
loan
committee.
There
are
another
100
who
have
not
yet
completed
their
application,
but
they've
started
it.
They
may
be,
they
still
owe
financials
or
they
have
some
different
things
to
add.
B
A
Of
what
I
hear
from
businesses,
though,
is
that
they're
they're
seeing
these
loans,
of
course,
something
that
they
have
to
pay
back
but
they're
looking
at
wanting
grants,
they're
not
wanting
to
you
know,
have
to
be
able
to
pay
this
back
because
they
know
they're
gonna
be
hurting,
especially
small
businesses,
for
this
next,
maybe
you're.
So
is
there
a
place
that
small
businesses
can
go
to
look
for
grant
money?
Well,.
B
The
the
main
point
is
the
federal
program
which
is
much
much
bigger
as
it
should
be,
then
the
local
program-
sorry
I,
don't
know
the
dings.
If
you
hear
those,
but
the
the
federal
program
does
allow
for
forgivable
loans.
If
small
businesses
use
the
proceeds
for
payroll
and
for
the
right
kinds
of
purposes
and
I,
don't
know
all
those
details,
but
that's
really
where
people
should
be
aiming
for
the
grant
dollars,
because
the
the
the
city
just
doesn't
have
enough
money
to
to
put
a
bunch
of
grant
money
on
the
street
to
support
our
businesses.
B
B
A
B
To
this
we
sure
hope
they
don't
I
sure
know
there
are
tons
of
businesses.
Who've
dramatically
changed.
Of
course,
in
the
hope,
is
we
can
help
them
survive?
No,
you
know,
look
it's
it's
the
reality
that
in
a
regular
year
in
Bloomington
in
a
normal
year,
business
is
open
and
closed.
I
mean
that
that
is
a
typical
rhythm
that
we're
gonna
see.
What
we
don't
want
to
have
happen
is
a
bunch
of
potentially
successful
businesses
fail
just
because
of
a
cash
flow
problem,
and
these
in
these
couple
months
for.
A
Those
that
are
just
joining
us-
this
is
our
monthly
ask.
The
mayor
feature
on
wfiu
I.
Think
we're
sharing
this
over
on
wtiu
Facebook
as
well.
We're
doing
it
live
as
just
another
way
to
get
the
information
out
from
Bloomington,
Mayor,
John,
Hamilton
and
next
week.
I
think
we'll
be
with
it
we'll
be
in
Nashville,
with
Town
Manager
there
and
every
week
we're
in
a
different
City,
so
we're
happy
to
be
in
Bloomington
and
John.
A
Hamilton
has
a
few
moments
to
answer
some
of
your
questions
that
we
went
out
on
Facebook
the
last
two
days
to
try
and
gather
and
we'll
hit
a
few
more
up
here.
The
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health
reported
over
the
weekend.
A
new
drive-through
testing
sites
in
four
parts
of
the
state,
I
believe
it's
in
Evansville,
Sellersburg,
Geary
and
Fort,
Wayne
and
I
know
it
was
testing
was
something
that
you
really
strongly
felt
that
we
needed
more
of
that
was
three
weeks
ago.
A
B
We
do
have
access
to
Public
Safety
workers
now
first
responders
through
the
IU
Health
System
and
I
want
to
thank
IU
Health
for
the
way
they've
they've
made
that
possible
and
we've
had
people
getting
tested.
My
wife
got
tested
because
of
our
symptoms
and
there's
the
thousands
of
people
going
through
the
different
protocols
to
get
into
the
testing.
Now
that
said,
we
are
the
United.
B
It's
potential
threats
for
many
many
months
for
sure
from
all
I
can
understand
so
so
that
testing
regime
I
know
is
we're
behind
in
a
country
on
that,
but
we're
catching
up
and
I
the
best
IU
Health
and
some
of
the
others,
the
Health
Department
are
are
doing
all
they
can
I
know
to
make
those
tests
available,
which
is,
it
is
really
important
to
know.
Yeah.
A
Those
were
drive-through
testing
sites
that
I
mentioned
in
those
four
others,
four,
but
those
are
for
public
safety
workers
and
I.
Think
you
know
that's
something
that
we
don't
know
about
you
guys
in
the
city,
but
here
at
the
station
we
hear
most
the
questions
coming
in.
How
can
I
I
think
I
have
that
you
know
the
symptoms.
I
mean
experiencing
symptoms.
How
do
I
get
tested?
Just
I
guess
the
answer
is:
go
to
IU
Health
right.
You.
B
Go
to
there
there's
a
website
where
you
can
do
virtual
screening
and
then
you
can
get
through
to
the
to
the
tests
themselves
and
I
wish.
We
could
just
say
everybody
can
get
tested,
I
mean
right
yeah,
but
we're
not
there.
Yet
I
do
I
know
our
first
responders,
there's
a
special
set
up
for
them
to
protect
them
and
we're
very
pleased
with
that
and
you
know,
like
health
care
workers
who
are
tested.
B
These
are
people
who
have
to
keep
working
there
they're
essential
for
our
community
to
keep
functioning,
and
we
really
want
to
know
quickly.
If
there's
an
issue
with
one
of
them.
You
know
hoping
we
don't
end
like
New,
York,
City
had
I,
don't
know
20
or
30
percent
of
their
Police
Department
on
quarantine
and
in
isolation
and
big.
You
know
big
numbers
of
fire,
and
luckily
we
haven't
had
that
here
locally
and
we
hope
not
to
as
it's.
B
You
know
Joe,
that's
it's
basically
symptom
driven
it
right.
If
you
have
particular
exposure
to
someone
who
you
knew
was
infectious,
there
may
be
ways
to
do
that,
but
the
testing,
the
testing
is
not
effective.
Typically,
if
you're
not
symptomatic,
so
it
doesn't
do
a
lot
of
good
to
test
with
what
we
have
now
now.
We
do
I
think
we're
moving
towards
some
things
like
serological
testing,
where
they
can
actually
see.
Do
you
have
anybody's
like
check
your
blood?
B
You
actually
have
been
infected
and
you've
developed
anybody's
that
that
would
be
very
helpful
too
I
will
say
one
other
thing
we're
doing
for
our
first
responders.
Is
we've
set
aside
some
hotel
rooms
that
we've
dedicated
for
them
if
they,
if
they
don't
want
to
go
but
back
home
between
their
shifts?
This
is
happening
for
healthcare
workers
and
also
police
and
fire
and
dispatch,
and
some
of
our
water
operators.
B
We
have
a
place
for
them
to
just
kind
of
go
to
a
hotel,
room
and
hunker
down
in
between
shifts,
and
so
they
don't
go
back
and
forth
to
their
family
and
that's
helpful
to
have
you
been
tested.
I
have
not
I
may
be,
but
I
have
not
I've
been
completely
asymptomatic.
Okay,
the
I
think
the
tests
are
unlikely
to
find
anything
so
I,
don't
know
if
I've
had
it
or
never
had
it.
I
just
don't
know,
but
I've
had
no
symptoms
and.
A
B
And
we
appreciate
that
they're
part
of
the
three
times
a
week,
all
coordinating
all
this
and
it's
really
great
to
see
people
pulling
together,
like
that.
That's
very
helpful,
for
you
know
nurse
or
nurse
or
doctor
who's,
running
long
shifts
and
back
and
forth
to
the
cove
edoardo
n--,
one
who
just
may
want
to
sleep
in
a
hotel
room
rather
than
going
home
back
and
forth
each
time.
So
that's
really
helpful.
Where.
B
The
first
week
was
intense
and
difficult
because
we
had
five
hundred
plus
people
who
signed
up
and-
and
it
was
just
it
was
it-
there
were
some
long
waits.
The
second
weekend
which
just
completed
was
very
good
I,
think
very
smooth
from
what
I
understand
overall
much
quicker
for
getting
people
in
and
out.
You
know
we're
learning
a
new
regime
how
to
do
this.
B
Virtual
virtual
grocery
store
farmers
market
it's
down
at
the
switchyard,
so
they
can
use
that
large
indoor
pavilion
to
to
stage
food
out
of
for
the
farmers,
whether
that
stays
there
or
comes
back
downtown,
we're
still
trying
to
figure
out
frankly
for
May
when
the
kind
of
the
traditional
market
opens.
But
farmers
have
food
to
sell
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
residents
want
to
buy
the
food,
and
it's
just
figuring
out
the
new
logistics
to
make
that
work
safely
for
everybody.
If.
A
Some
questions
not
with
the
coronavirus
but
along
with
the
farmers
market
I
wanted
to
get
an
update
on
the
schooner
Creek
Farm
lawsuit.
The
city
filed
a
response
with
the
court
on
Monday
and
on
the
schooner
Creek
Farm
lawsuit,
the
lawsuit
argues,
the
mayor
parks
officials
violated
First,
Amendment
rights
at
the
market.
In
a
previous
ask
the
mayor,
of
course,
you
don't,
you
denied
the
claims.
What
was
in
the
response
that
you
sent
on
Monday
well.
B
Jo
we've
been
sued
by
a
couple
different
people
for
the
farmers
market
and
I
think
the
responses
have
basically
said
this
has
been
responsible
and
following
the
law
in
all
regards
in
trying
to
run
this
farmers
market
as
we
have
and
we're
now
in
the
fifth
decade
of
the
farmers
market,
it's
I'm,
sorry,
we
have
litigation,
but
that's
the
world
we're
in
that
can
happen.
You
know
we
continue
to
wrestle
with
it
with
a
challenge.
Look
it's!
B
It
is
a
challenging
thing
in
a
community
when
a
when
a
now
self-professed
supremacists
at
least
identitarian,
which
for
most
of
us
means
supremacists,
they
may
not
want
to
use
that
word,
but
that's
what
it
is
in
a
public
market
wants
to
be
part
of
the
system.
It's
it's
anathema,
it's
not
at
all.
What
Bloomington
stands
for
and
I've
made
clear
from
the
beginning
that
this
market
it
welcomes.
Everyone
is
inclusive
and
stands
for
the
values
of
Bloomington
that
that
absolutely
condemn
white
supremacy
or
those
who
do
advocate
for
it.
B
B
You
have
the
right
to
believe
what
you
want
and
not
have
the
government
punish
you
because
of
it
that
causes
stress
and
we're
still
in
the
middle
of
that,
but
I'm
really
proud
of
the
parks
department
and
our
community
to
keep
embracing
the
the
farm
community
as
a
whole
and
to
keep
standing
up
for
the
values
of
Bloomington,
which
are
for
inclusion
and
diversity
and
we'll
keep
working
on
that.
So
is.
B
Basically,
I
haven't
read
those
in
detail,
so
be
careful,
be
careful,
but
basically
we
just
said
look.
We
are
we're
following
the
Constitution
and
we're
following
the
law
and
we're
following
our
contract
agreements
with
everybody.
No,
no
one,
the
schooner
Creek
has
suggested
we're
not
defending
or
protecting
them
enough
and
another
lawsuit
has
suggested
we're
not
we're
not
protecting
other
individuals
enough
and
we
believe
we're
doing
the
right
thing
overall
in
protecting
the
market,
protecting
the
First
Amendment,
but
also
standing
up
for
the
values
of
the
community
and.
A
B
Were
some
concerns
which
have
been
shared
with
Skinner
and
another
vendor
who
we
feel
did
not
fully
comply
with
the
terms
of
the
vendor
contract?
One
example
is,
under
the
contract.
Vendors
are
required
to
notify
us
the
city
ahead.
If
there's
going
to
be
a
different
employee
working,
the
booth
stuff
called
stand
assistance
and
on
at
least
two
occasions,
schooner
Creek
did
not
do
that,
which
was
a
violation
of
the
contract,
and
we
wanted
them
to
know
that
that's
the
case.
B
A
B
Try
to
give
quick
answers,
I
have
not
heard
reports
of
more
vandalism.
I
can
tell
you
overall,
the
police
reports
are
down
significantly
in
the
community.
We
have
fewer
crime
calls
and
reports.
I
can
I
can
look
into
that.
The
police
are
very
much
on
the
scene
and
work
in
our
community
to
protect
everybody.
If
you
have
reports
of
that
kind
of
thing,
please
do
let
us
know
we
take
it
very
seriously.
A
B
You
know
if
for
a
couple
reasons,
one
because
there's
much
less
traffic
right
now
and
because
construction
projects
can
be
done
safely
and
they
do
help
the
economy
keep
going.
So
there
are
a
number
of
construction
projects
from
17th
Street
to
Kirkwood,
to
Allen,
to
Adams,
to
say
Road
to
the
East
Third
Street,
there's
a
whole
bunch
of
projects
that
are
underway
being
done
well,
but
it
it's
a
good
thing
for
the
economy
and
and
to
take
advantage
of
the
lighter
traffic
to
get
some
of
this
work
done
and
those.
A
B
It
physical
distancing,
you
just
can't
be
close
physically,
it
can
be
some
of
the
some
of
the
road
crews.
There
may
be
special
things
and
procedures
they
need
to
do.
It
may
take
a
little
longer,
sometimes,
but
basically
that
most
of
those
projects
allow
that
outdoor
work
to
keep
going
just,
for
example,
health,
continues
their
hospital
construction
on
the
far
east
side.
That's
a
that's
continuing
full
speed
to
keep
that
project
owned
and
get
to
a
new
hospital
opened
a
listener.
B
They're
there
you
know:
we've
we've
had
the
B
link
trail
there
in
the
switchyard
crossing
we'll
be
there.
There
is
pedestrian
access
to
switch
art
from
all
that
now,
I,
don't
think
I'm!
Sorry
I
haven't
been
there.
I've
been
self
quarantine
in
the
house
for
a
while,
but
I
don't
there
will
be
Hawkeye
lights,
put
up
on
Walnut
for
the
pedestrians
to
protect
them
because
that's
a
big
street
to
cross,
but
it's
really
important
to
get
people
in
and
out
of
the
switchyard.
That
way,
I
think.
A
B
We're
gonna,
we're
gonna
get
through
it.
We're
gonna
come
out
the
other
side.
We
want
to
do
it
as
safely
as
we
can,
and
we
want
to
do
it
with
this
little
economic
damage,
as
we
can
and
I
want
to
thank
everybody,
who's
working
so
hard
for
that.
Thank
the
media
for
your
continued
work
to
get
the
word
out
on
on
this
all.