LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- A mediator has been chosen for the case between New Albany and the Indiana Department of Natural Resources concerning the Silver Creek dam. The controversy started after 14-year-old AJ Edwards drowned there on Memorial Day last year.
A 63-year-old woman, Sandra Hebert, was reported missing from New Albany, Indiana, and is believed to be in extreme danger and may require medical assistance.
"If I could just find out where it is in the process, I'm willing to go pick up myself, it's not far from me."
According to INDOT, the vehicle fire happened on I-265 East at about 8:30 a.m. As of 4:30 p.m., all lanes of I-265 between Paoli Pike, State Street and Grant Line Road have been reopened.
NEW ALBANY, Ind. — Police in southern Indiana have declared a statewide Silver Alert for a woman missing from Floyd County. Sandra Hebert, 63, was last seen in New Albany, Indiana, about 115 miles south of Indianapolis, around 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 15. She was driving a tan 2006 Toyota Avalon with Indiana license plate D407GV.
TRIMARC showed heavy traffic on westbound I-265 between Charlestown and Grant Line roads due to the fire Thursday morning.
The Indiana State Police announced the Silver Alert has been cancelled for Sandra Hebert as of Friday morning.
Parents of a New Albany boy killed in a crash have filed a lawsuit against a trucking company. Eamon Goodrich, 9, died last July in a multi-vehicle crash on Interstate 465 in Indianapolis. Goorich's father and sister were also seriously hurt in the crash.
Indiana State Police officials have charged a second person accused of helping Austin Schepers elude law enforcement.
On Jan. 3, Andry was shot four times during a traffic stop on Highway 150 near West Baden, Indiana. The suspect in the shooting, Austin Schepers, was shot and killed by police in Louisville on Saturday, Jan. 4, after an extensive manhunt .
Rose Acre Farms, the nation's second largest egg producer, said yesterday that tests have confirmed avian flu at its facility in Seymour, Indiana, which could further stretch the supply of eggs as commercial farms in several states continue to battle the spread of the H5N1 virus.
Opponents of the bill said such a measure would punish nonprofit hospitals for even a single case of prices exceeding the requirement and that it would financially harm hospitals. At stake, critics said, is the ability of these Hoosier hospitals to stay financially viable and to provide the community benefit and charity care to those in need.