The City of Goshen Offices will be closed on Thursday, November 28, and Friday, November 29, for the Thanksgiving Holiday.
Additionally, all trash and recycling services will be delayed one day due to the holiday. Normal service will resume on Monday, December 2. The delayed schedule is below:
Residents... more
The Indiana Avenue Recycling Center will be closed for recycling drop-off from Wednesday, November 27, at 2:00 PM until Monday, December 2, at 8:00 AM. We'll see you on Monday!
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On Monday, November 25, beginning a 9 a.m. are boil order will be issued for the 100 block of N 6th Street due to a water main valve shut off to repair and place a water valve and fire hyrdrant.
The affected area includes the 100 block of N 6th St. between E. Clinton St. and E. Lincoln Ave, 208... more
The intersection of Kercher Road and Keystone Drive will be closed this afternoon to allow the Goshen Water and Sewer Department install a new water main valve. The work will require excavation of the road, with a trench about 8 ft deep.
The intersection will remain closed from 4 p.m. until midnight, when it will reopen to traffic.
On Tuesday, the Goshen City Council passed an ordinance creating the new Department of Environmental Resilience.
City Forester Aaron Kingsley will head the department, which will work with all other City departments in finding more effective and sustainable approaches to the City’s (municipal government) operations.
While Kingsley will continue to work on the 45 by 45 tree canopy goal, the new department will allow him to also work with other department heads to cut costs and find more sustainable alternatives for operating our facilities. The new department will also provide educational opportunities for students and residents.
Mayor Jeremy Stutsman and Clerk Treasurer Angie McKee signed the ordinance, making the new department official today, Friday, Sept. 6. Kingsley and City staff will be working in the next few months to set up the new department so it is fully operating by January of 2020.
The August brush pickup will begin on Monday,
August 26.
During
scheduled brush collections, the Street Department will make only one pass
through the city to pick up brush. Residents are asked to have their brush by
the front curb, but not in the street, by that first day in the morning at 7
a.m. Brush will not be picked up in alleys. The piles of brush should be
trash-free. Crews cannot access the piles if blocked by vehicles.
Following a successful pilot community conversation in the spring,
the Goshen Community Relations Commission (CRC) and Goshen Community Schools
(GCS) will embark on a series of events in the next several months that will
encourage discourse around topics that uniquely affect Goshen’s residents.
A series of three community conversations—all open to the
public—will be held at various locations throughout the city this fall, each
addressing a different theme that arose from participating members at a pilot
conversation in April. The series of conversations is called “Growing Goshen
Together” (GGT).
Jes Stoltzfus Buller, a skilled facilitator with significant
experience in collaborative group dialogue, will host the conversations in a
World Café format. This method of small group, round-table discussion offers an
intimate setting that invites curiosity and helps build relationships, while
giving everyone a chance to speak.
Interpretation will be offered at each table between English and
Spanish, so that participants may share in whichever language is most
comfortable for them. All information and introductory comments will also be
provided in both English and Spanish.
After each conversation, the facilitator will write a report based
on table notes and comments, and post-event surveys. The report will include
highlights from the conversation about themes that emerged, as well as ideas or
recommendations.
The information will serve as a springboard for the creation of an
action plan in each area. Representatives from CRC, GCS and Goshen City will
create a core action team and for each conversation/theme, conversation
participants and key stakeholders will be invited to join. This team will
evaluate the report and will come up with concrete next steps and follow-up
plans.
“Goshen is that rare community where we not only say we embrace
diversity, we live the values of acceptance, appreciation and celebration of
diversity every day,” said Steve Hope, deputy superintendent at GCS and a
member of the GGT series committee. “Also central to the mission of Goshen
Community Schools, we are pleased to partner with the city’s Community
Relations Commission in supporting this series of community conversations. At
the heart of any vibrant and economically strong community is a strong school
system. Through each conversation the Goshen Community Schools also learns and
grows and is better able to support each and every one of our students.”
CRC and GCS began conversations in 2018 to brainstorm
possibilities toward building bridges between diverse groups in the community.
Recognizing diversity of all kinds throughout the city, they saw an opportunity
for promoting tolerance, understanding and gratitude for all people. This led
to a pilot community conversation, Growing Goshen Together, on April 25, 2019,
held at Goshen High School. Responses from that event called for more
conversations. Through continued conversations about the issues facing the
Goshen community, CRC and GCS hope to continue fostering relationships
throughout the Goshen community.
The following information offers details about the upcoming fall
conversation series. A potential spring series is in the works, pending
approval from the CRC.
A culture that learns: Our schools and community together •
September 26, 2019 • 6–8 p.m. • Boys and Girls Club
Summary:This conversation will offer the opportunity to learn from the
community’s schools, which are home to embodied diversity in Goshen, lived out
in practice every day. The conversation will focus on what is going well in our
schools and where growth is needed. How can our schools better serve the families
in Goshen, and what is their role in the larger community?
How Goshen grows: Balancing power and raising up leaders • October
24, 2019 • 6–8 p.m. • Shanklin Park, Schrock Pavilion Summary: This conversation will address leadership and power in the
Goshen community. Participants will have the opportunity to speak into
successful balances of power and how that is created, as well as look at
challenges to equalized power. How does one access power and how does the
community grow capacity and leadership to provide opportunities for shared
power?
Who is Goshen: Telling our stories • November 14, 2019 • 6–8 p.m.
• Boys and Girls Club Summary: This conversation will provide space to get to know others in
the community by listening and sharing about identity and the experiences that
shape each person. How have our experiences shaped our values? Bridging
divides requires knowing one another—can we learn to know each other and move
from strangers to friends?
Jefferson Street is closed this week between 3rd Street and River Race Drive for the safety of the public—HRP Construction will stage construction equipment and materials north of Jefferson Street, requiring equipment to travel north and south across Jefferson Street as a new parking lot is constructed to the south.
The west southbound lane of 3rd Street will also be restricted during the first several weeks to remove an existing drive approach and install new curb and sidewalk.
The Jefferson Street closure will last until the new parking lot is complete or October 15—whichever comes first. The west southbound lane restriction will go through August 23.
The intersection of Wilden Avenue and 1st Street will be closed Tuesday, Aug. 13, and will reopen Saturday, Aug. 17. The detour will be Wilden to Michigan Avenue to Johnson Street to Main Street (SR 15).
Work on Main Street will begin Monday, August 12, beginning with sidewalk work on the south end of the project corridor (Madison Street). Sidewalks and some parking spaces will be under a rolling closure as work will continuously move north until completion in September.
The closure may include a restriction of the outside travel lanes, but two-way traffic will remain in place during this stage of construction. City staff will notify businesses in advance of the construction when the work will be in front of their store front.