TERRE HAUTE —
Dozens of Terre Haute community leaders gathered downtown Tuesday morning to learn their city has been named “Community of the Year” by the Indiana Chamber of Commerce.
Business, education, health care and government leaders crowded into the Wabash Avenue offices of the Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce to hear Kevin Brinegar, president of the Indiana Chamber, make the big announcement.
The 20 Hoosier cities that have won the honor since 1990 have “all demonstrated tremendous public and private sector cooperation, working toward the ultimate goal of improving both the area’s business climate and the quality of life for residents,” Brinegar said. Past winners have included Indianapolis, Noblesville, Anderson, Evansville, Valparaiso, Muncie and greater Lafayette. “Now, we add Terre Haute to that list,” he said.
Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett will formally receive the honor at the Indiana Chamber’s 21st annual awards dinner in Indianapolis on Nov. 9, Brinegar said. Television journalist and author Tom Brokaw will be the event’s keynote speaker.
“What a great day for Terre Haute,” Bennett told the crowd of community leaders, which spilled out of the Chamber’s conference room into the hallways. “It’s all about the team effort.”
About 20 Hoosier communities applied with the Indiana Chamber, a pro-business organization, for the 2010 Community of the Year recognition, Brinegar said. Several different factors — including the Riverscape project, significant downtown revitalization, large-scale healthcare investment and the continued growth of the area’s four institutions of higher education — contributed to Terre Haute being selected for the honor, he said.
Terre Haute’s winning of the 2010 Community of the Year award was not the result of one person, group or business, said Rod Henry, president of the Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce, which nominated the city for the award. “It is recognition of Terre Haute’s spirit of cooperation, collaboration, consensus-building affecting public-private partnerships, vision, patience.”
Several years of effort went into earning the Community of the Year award, Henry said. Actually achieving the honor is “certainly not the beginning and definitely is not the end. It is a stage in our transformation from what once was described as a model of stagnation into a community that is truly a level above.”
Also at Tuesday morning’s ceremony, Henry unveiled a new logo, developed by the Terre Haute-based marking firm MillerWhite, commemorating the Community of the Year recognition. The Tribune-Star printed window signs bearing the new logo for distribution. The local Chamber also has established a task force to help the city capitalize on the honor, Henry noted.
Past winners of the Community of the Year award have used the honor to promote their cities and build civic pride, Brinegar said after the ceremony. He is not aware, however, of past winners creating a logo, printing window signs or taking some of the other steps Terre Haute community leaders already have done.
“I’m impressed,” Brinegar said. “I think that the Terre Haute Chamber and the Terre Haute community will take this and use this for community pride and business recruitment, maybe above and beyond what we’ve seen” from other Community of the Year winners.
Bennett said being named 2010 Community of the Year presents “a great opportunity” for future growth. “We can showcase ourselves around the rest of the state, and hopefully make some of our folks here that are a little stubborn be more proud about our community and jump in with the rest of us and get involved with progress and moving Terre Haute forward.”
Arthur Foulkes can be reached at (812) 231-4232 or arthur.foulkes@tribstar.com.
Local & Bistate
Terre Haute named 2010 Indiana Chamber 'Community of the Year'
City ‘demonstrated tremendous’ public, private cooperation
- Local & Bistate
-
-
Asian hooded crane lands in Greene County wildlife area
Bird watchers are flocking to a southwestern Indiana wildlife area to try to catch a glimpse of a crane usually spotted only in Asia.
-
Slow drips: It’s maple syrup season in Indiana
More seasonal, colder temperatures will hit the Wabash Valley this weekend, which is ideal weather for maple syrup production, said Keith Ruble, superintendent of the Vigo County Parks and Recreation Department.
However, Ruble voices concern that this year’s maple syrup season may be short.
-
Downtown restaurant celebrates expansion
The streets of Terre Haute were chilly Thursday night, but for the glow of hot pasta inside Louise’s Pizzeria and Cafe.
-
Contract signed for new Y
Papers are signed and the ink is in place for a new YMCA to operate in Terre Haute.
-
City to impose $30 release fee on towed vehicles
The Terre Haute City Council voted without opposition Thursday to impose a new $30 release fee on vehicles towed and impounded by the police as part of a criminal investigation.
-
Valley educators cautious on Indiana’s ‘No Child’ waiver
Indiana is one of 10 states to receive a waiver from federal No Child Left Behind requirements.
-
Driver dies after Illinois school bus crash
“Brace yourself. Brace yourself,” Fay Pickering shouted to her students just before the school bus she was driving crossed U.S. 40 and landed in a ditch Thursday morning.
-
Trial date set for former WTH police chief
A July 23 trial date has been set for a former police chief of West Terre Haute accused of theft.
-
Motorcycle gang member pleads guilty in federal court
A member of an Indianapolis motorcycle gang who delivered methamphetamine to a Terre Haute dealer has pleaded guilty to drug charges in federal court.
-
July trial date set for mother charged with child neglect
A July 30 trial date has been set for a Terre Haute mother charged with neglecting and battering her toddler.
-
Business hosting SPPRAK fundraiser
Java Haute is hosting the latest fundraiser sponsored by SPPRAK — Special People Performing Random Acts of Kindness.
-
Valley high school cooking competition under way today
Clabber Girl Corp. and Gordon Food Services will host the fourth-annual High School Chef Competition, beginning today through Saturday, and again Feb. 18, in the Culinary Classroom at Clabber Girl.
- UPDATE: Marshall, Ill., school bus driver involved in accident dies; cause appears to be cardiac-related
-
Terre Haute road name game
What used to be called U.S. 40 from the Wabash River west through West Terre Haute to Interstate 70 needs to be renamed and, probably, get new street addresses, a Vigo County planner recommends.
-
MARK BENNETT: William Henry Harrison taught us how to campaign
William Henry Harrison is running for president, again.
It seems impossible, because today would be his 239th birthday, and America has never elected a deceased person to the Oval Office. -
Air National Guard cuts won’t hit 181st Intelligence Wing
The Air National Guard is taking the lion’s share of planned cuts announced last week by the U.S. Air Force. But no cuts are currently expected at Terre Haute’s 181st Intelligence Wing. In fact, the nation’s evolving defense strategy may spell growth at the local base.
-
Friends group takes over Ernie Pyle home in Dana
The western Indiana home in which renowned Hoosier journalist Ernie Pyle was born and an adjacent museum dedicated to preserving his legacy as a World War II correspondent have a new owner.
-
ISU rec center pool out of service while being repaired
Indiana State University is spending about $10,000 to repair a swimming pool at the Student Recreation Center, which opened in 2009.
-
Clinton man throws away, then recovers, $50,000 ticket
A Vermillion County man found himself in a scenario that strikes fear in the heart of Lottery players everywhere. He threw away a $50,000 winning ticket.
-
Show to feature talents of artists with disabilities
Artists whose disabilities have overshadowed their work get a chance to shine in the light of a prodigy this coming month.
-
Fort Wayne forester tells of damage
The emerald ash borer likely will cause as much as $8 million in damage to Fort Wayne’s ash trees by 2015, the city’s manager of forestry operations told a Terre Haute audience Tuesday.
-
Unclaimed assets now part of Goodwill auction site
Many of Indiana’s unclaimed assets are now on Goodwill’s online auction site, Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller announced Tuesday.
-
Toyota to increase Highlander output in Indiana
Toyota will increase production of the Highlander mid-size SUV in late 2013 at the company’s Princeton, Indiana plant. Hybrid and export versions will be included. The project is expected to create about 400 new jobs at Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana Inc.
-
Friends of Ernie Pyle takes ownership, renames Dana museum
The western Indiana home in which renowned Hoosier journalist Ernie Pyle was born, and an adjacent museum dedicated to preserving his legacy as a World War II correspondent, have a new owner.
-
Spreading Goodwill
Goodwill Industries Inc. on Tuesday opened its third Terre Haute store.
-
Feds sending money to Feather Creek
Clinton residents have reason to celebrate.
Federal officials have granted more than $800,000 toward a $1.2 million project of widening and deepening Feather Creek, which has been a flooding problem in the city since the Great Depression. Work could begin in spring 2013. -
City to clean up Toney site
A contaminated petroleum site at the northwestern edge of Indiana State University’s campus will be transferred to the city of Terre Haute to remove the property from a pending sale.
-
Bennett: Terre Haute ‘moving in the right direction’
After four years of shrinking budgets and a slow economy, Terre Haute is “moving in the right direction,” Mayor Duke Bennett said Tuesday morning in his first “State of the City” address since being re-elected by Terre Haute voters in November.
Difficult financial and political battles are largely in the past, he said, and now the city can start moving forward in ways not possible in the past four years. -
Terre Haute group locates missing caver
An Iraq war veteran and caving enthusiast took his own life about half a mile from where he left his car on a rural road but more than four months passed before four young spelunkers exploring where they weren’t allowed found him deep inside a treacherous cave, Indiana conservation officers said Tuesday.
-
Schools celebrate rising graduation rates as ‘team effort’
For the fourth year in a row, Vigo County School Corp. graduation rates have topped the state average, school district officials said during a news conference Tuesday.
- More Local & Bistate Headlines
-
Asian hooded crane lands in Greene County wildlife area








