Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse

City of Richmond

Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse is your go-to podcast for staying connected with the heart of Richmond, Indiana. Dive into the latest community updates, local events, city initiatives, and stories that matter most to our vibrant community. Whether you're a lifelong resident or new to the area, this podcast keeps you in tune with the pulse of Richmond! 

  1. 10H AGO

    Episode 26 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | How the Vaile Neighborhood Project Is Changing Richmond

    Vacant lots don’t just sit there, they slow everything around them down. On Richmond’s south side, that’s starting to change in a real way. Host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Sarah Mitchell from the Economic Development Corporation of Wayne County along with Jeb Reece and Bennett Bensman from Intend Indiana to break down the Vaile Neighborhood Project, a plan bringing 22 new single-family homes to long-vacant parcels and turning them into real opportunities for homeownership. This conversation gets into what actually makes a project like this possible. From closing the appraisal gap to leveraging HOME funds and offering up to $20,000 in down payment assistance, this is the behind-the-scenes work that helps monthly payments compete with rent. They also walk through what buyers can expect, including three-bedroom layouts, one- and two-story options, and a focus on quality construction that raises the standard for affordable housing. If you’ve ever wondered what it takes to qualify, we lay out the full path. Income requirements, lender pre-approval, reserving a home during construction, and the Homeownership 101 program course hosted at Vaile Elementary that helps guide buyers through budgeting, mortgages, and life after closing. Learn more about the Homeownership 101 program: https://intendindiana.org/homeownership-101/ Watch the Homeownership 101 overview video: https://youtu.be/EPxB1O2WoKI?si=UTQh26jdv4oezctf Read more about the project: https://whywaynecounty.com/community-partners-break-ground-on-vaile-neighborhood-revitalization-project-bringing-22-new-affordable-homes-to-richmonds-southside/

    29 min
  2. FEB 23

    Episode 25 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | Why the Wayne County Land Trust Matters for Richmond’s Future

    Want to see Main Street buzzing after dark again? Host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Acacia St. John of Forward Wayne County and Rebecca Gilliam of the Wayne County Foundation to talk about how the new Wayne County Land Trust is working to keep historic buildings in local hands, open the door for mixed use housing, and create a downtown that truly serves residents and small businesses. The conversation dives into the real challenges Richmond has faced, including absentee ownership and long vacant storefronts, and why a community land trust offers a practical path forward. You will hear how early philanthropic support helped secure key properties, how each building will remain on the tax rolls, and how tools like historic tax credits and private investment will help sustain the vision long term. With most acquisitions complete, the focus now shifts to planning, design, and due diligence, with phased construction expected over the next few years alongside projects like Six at Main and ongoing downtown activation efforts. This is about building a downtown people can live in, walk through, and enjoy every day. From upper floor apartments to locally owned shops and safer, more inviting streets, the goal is to create spaces shaped by the community. The episode also explores governance through the Foundation, safeguards for transparency, and a strong commitment to local contractors and suppliers. Most importantly, there is an open invitation for residents to share what they want to see fill these spaces, from cafés and bookstores to studios, gathering spots, and thoughtful design touches that make downtown feel alive. If you care about the future of Richmond, now is the time to lean in.  To learn more, visit waynecountyfoundation.org and forwardwaynecounty.org.

    44 min
  3. JAN 26

    Episode 24 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | How Airport Infrastructure Impacts Everyone in the Community

    In this episode of Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse, host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Richmond Municipal Airport Manager Rodney Mayse and Board of Aviation President Jonathan Meade to discuss why Richmond’s nearly 80 year old airport terminal has reached the end of its usable life and what a modern, ADA compliant facility could mean for the future of the community. Rodney and Jonathan explain the real challenges facing the current terminal, including chronic leaks, cramped and outdated spaces, and accessibility limitations. They outline how the proposed single story design prioritizes function and dignity with improved accessibility, runway facing glass, after hours access for pilots, and a dedicated conference room that better reflects the professionalism of the airport and the city it serves. The conversation breaks down the funding in clear, practical terms. Richmond Municipal Airport operates as a self sustaining entity through farm leases, hangar rentals, and fuel sales. FAA funding supports runways and airside infrastructure but does not cover terminal buildings. A competitive 1.4 million dollar Bipartisan Infrastructure Law grant could help close the gap on a roughly 2.3 million dollar project alongside airport reserves, existing FAA allocations, and a 200 thousand dollar private gift. Federal aviation funds are tightly regulated and must remain within aviation. Passing on available grants simply sends that funding to another city, which is why the airport is applying now while also preparing a backup plan that includes naming rights and donor recognition if needed. Beyond the building itself, the episode explores who uses Richmond Municipal Airport and why it matters. Business jets, charter flights, flight schools training future airline pilots, and air ambulance services rely on the airport’s two intersecting long runways and consistent operations. A modern terminal encourages pilots to choose Richmond, spend locally, and return. For executives and site selectors, the terminal sends a clear message about how the community invests in critical infrastructure, often influencing where future growth and opportunity take root. Subscribe to Inside Richmond, share this episode with others who care about local progress, and leave a review to help more people find the show.

    31 min
  4. 12/21/2025

    Episode 23 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | Richmond’s 2025 Momentum Explained with Mayor Ron Oler

    This week on Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse, host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Mayor Ron Oler to close out 2025 by taking a clear look at the momentum building across Richmond. Big change feels different when you can see it from your car window and from a kayak on the river. Together, they pull back the curtain on a downtown comeback rooted in historic preservation, a housing strategy moving at full speed, and a parks system being rebuilt with focus, accountability, and long term vision. From the evolving skyline at Six Main to retailers eyeing new storefronts, the conversation walks through what is built, what is funded, and what comes next. Lindsay and Mayor Oler break down the numbers and the neighborhoods driving progress. More than $100 million in investment is transforming five historic buildings into housing and retail. The Vale neighborhood is adding 22 new affordable homes on long empty lots. State leaders have taken notice of Richmond’s housing readiness, and Mayor Oler explains how first time buyers can use local support to turn keys in the year ahead. They also explain why the city rebalanced its park system, shifting resources from underused micro parks to high demand destinations like Middle Fork Reservoir to better serve families across the community. The missing piece finally clicks into place with the approval of a dedicated 1 percent food and beverage tax for parks, trails, and Whitewater Gorge activation. They walk through the safeguards, the council vote, and the projects this funding unlocks, from replacing Glen Miller Park’s worn playground to building a connected river corridor designed for paddling, biking, and walking. With listeners tuning in from places like Hong Kong to Dayton, the episode closes with a call for community voices. Where are you listening from, why does Richmond matter to you, and which park or project should rise to the top in 2026. If this episode helps you better understand how Richmond grows, tap follow, share it with a neighbor, and leave a quick review. Your feedback helps shape what gets built next, both on the mic and on the ground.

    25 min
  5. 12/07/2025

    Episode 22 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | How Safe Haven Baby Boxes Save Lives with CEO Monica Kelsey and Richmond Fire Department Leaders

    A locked door, a soft bassinet, and a two minute response window. Sometimes that is the difference between a life saved and a tragedy. On this episode of Inside Richmond, host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Monica Kelsey, CEO and Founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, along with Richmond Fire Department Deputy Chief Nick Arbogast and Battalion Chief Chris Chappel, to talk about the Safe Haven Baby Box initiative and the one located right here in Richmond. Monica shares the origin of the program and how her own story of abandonment led her to discover a baby safe in a Cape Town church. That moment sparked a simple sketch on a napkin that eventually became the first Safe Haven Baby Box in the United States, installed in Woodburn, Indiana in 2016. Today the program has expanded to more than twenty states. Communities that combine boxes with education, outreach, and a 24/7 hotline are seeing fewer unsafe abandonments and more parents choosing safe, compassionate surrender through trained responders. Lindsay and the team break down how the system actually works. Alert tones. A locking and temperature controlled environment. A bassinet design shaped by real world use. Weekly drills and documented maintenance to keep readiness high. Support bags placed inside the box that offer resources for medical care and counseling for mothers in crisis. Deputy Chief Arbogast and Battalion Chief Chappel walk through Richmond’s journey to installing its Baby Box at Richmond Fire Department Station 1 at 101 S 5th St, Richmond, Indiana. The box is located in the rear of the building at the 6th Street entrance and parking lot. They talk about the role community fundraising played, why responder mental health is part of the conversation, and how short social videos and awareness campaigns continue to spread life saving information across the community. If you care about infant safety, maternal dignity, and practical steps communities can take right now, this episode gives you a grounded look at what is working in Richmond and beyond. If you or someone you know needs help today, share this link: https://www.shbb.org/. The primary hotline for Safe Haven Baby Boxes is 1-866-99BABY1 (1-866-992-2291). It is a confidential 24/7 service for parents in crisis who need support, information, or guidance. You can call or text to learn how Safe Haven laws work in your state, how to safely surrender a newborn, and how to connect with trained responders who protect the safety and dignity of both parent and baby. Please share this episode to help raise awareness of the Safe Haven Baby Box program and the resources available. Be sure to share the location of the Baby Box in Richmond at Station 1, 101 S 5th St, in the rear of the building at the 6th Street entrance and parking lot. This information saves lives.

    39 min
  6. 11/26/2025

    Episode 21 - Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse | How Richmond’s Proposed '1% Food & Beverage Tax' Would Work

    Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse, hosted by Lindsay Darnell, welcomes Parks Superintendent Denise Retz and Councilman District 3 Bill Engle to discuss how a small line on your dinner receipt could transform Richmond’s parks. Together, they break down the proposed 1% food and beverage tax, what is taxed, what is not, why state property tax caps created the funding gap, and how council oversight keeps every dollar tied to visible, high impact park projects. Using the community built master plan as the guide, the conversation walks through the first wave of priorities. These include replacing the 26 year old Glen Miller playground and splash pad, dredging and restoring key park features, and moving shovel ready gorge activation forward with 9.5M in partner funding already aligned. The numbers are simple and transparent. On a 20 meal, the tax is 20 cents. On a 100 family dinner, it is 1 dollar. Prepared foods at restaurants qualify. Hot items from grocers qualify. Groceries cooked at home do not. About 40% of the revenue comes from visitors because of I70 travel and the number of regional diners who treat Richmond as a hub. Restaurants treat it as a pass through in their point of sale systems, just like many other Indiana communities, and the city, Chamber, and operators are working together to make setup easy. Accountability stays at the center. Funds go into a dedicated account. The park board and staff make recommendations based on community surveys. City council makes appropriations. Annual audits verify spending. The focus is simple. Sustain what we have, improve what needs attention, and create new destinations that strengthen quality of life and local business. If approved, the tax could take effect the following month with an estimated 1.5M in the first year based on current receipts. For anyone who wants direct answers, review the Q and A for the FAB Tax at https://www.richmondindiana.gov/resources/richmond-food-and-beverage-tax-fab If this episode brings clarity, share it and invite more neighbors into the conversation.

    31 min
  7. 11/07/2025

    Episode 20 - Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse | The 2026 Budget Breakdown with Mayor Oler and Beth Fields

    Want a clear view of how a city actually pays for people, projects, and progress? On Inside Richmond: The City’s Pulse, host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Mayor Ron Oler and Beth Fields, Director of Strategic Initiatives, to unpack Richmond’s 2026 budget. They explain what comes in, what goes out, and why some dollars cannot be moved even when needs feel urgent. If you have ever wondered why sewer funds cannot fix park trails or how a fire engine gets financed, this episode breaks it down clearly. The conversation starts with the basics: revenue versus appropriations, and how a “balanced” budget differs from a “funded” one that taps reserves. They explore municipal bonds, which are low-interest, tax-exempt tools that allow the city to build now and repay over time. You will also learn about the five main spending categories: personnel, supplies, services, capital outlay, and debt service. The team explains how fund accounting legally restricts certain revenues, why the general fund remains the workhorse for police and fire, and how financial choices in one department ripple through 13 departments and 33 divisions. Tax policy plays a huge role too. Indiana’s property tax caps (1% for homesteads, 2% for rental or agricultural, and 3% for commercial) protect homeowners but reduce city revenue. For Richmond, those caps have meant millions less each year and roughly $120 million foregone over 15 years, requiring careful prioritization and conservative forecasting. The comprehensive plan helps guide those priorities, aligning spending with long-term community goals. You can see every detail of Richmond’s budget, including revenue, expenditures, and tax rates, at https://gateway.ifionline.org/ Grants also shape progress. Hear how a $2.95 million READI grant helped kickstart the Six Main housing project, covering demolition and early site work through public bidding while keeping local subcontractors involved to maximize community impact. By the end, you will understand how the 2026 budget works, why protecting cash balances matters, and how patience with new revenue streams prevents midyear cuts. To view Richmond’s full Comprehensive Plan, visit https://portal.laserfiche.com/Portal/DocView.aspx?id=220297&repo=r-979ae874&fbclid=IwY2xjawN6yHRleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETFyVUZPcDh1Y3Vkd0xKajFlc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQQMjIyMDM5MTc4ODIwMDg5MgABHldLbhFV4Y0UoP9KXxDBa6_zAGuFKYfjVQxj9bc39yMwIPGWcALI978XkQcJ_aem_l-hTzaKMBASNhaKxwHtR7Q

    25 min
  8. 10/19/2025

    Episode 19 - Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse | Inside the Tourism Strategy Shaping Wayne County with Mary Walker and Angel Murphy

    Ready to rethink what a Midwest getaway can be? Host Lindsay Darnell sits down with Mary Walker and Angel Murphy from the Wayne County Convention and Tourism Bureau to explore how Richmond blends national history, vibrant art, and outdoor adventure into an affordable trip that truly feels different. From the Levi Coffin House and the legacy of the Underground Railroad, to the birthplace of recorded jazz at Starr-Gennett, to two authentic Egyptian mummies and a mural scene worth every photo stop, Richmond is far from ordinary. We highlight the trails that make planning fun and effortless: Chocolate Trail for indie cafes and sweet shopsAntique Alley for treasure huntingHeartland Wine and Ale Trail linking local wineries and breweriesFamilies can go fossil hunting at Thistlethwaite Falls, paddle at Middlefork Reservoir, or bike the Cardinal Greenway. Plus, a major gorge project is on the horizon, bringing zip lines, tree houses, and boulder gardens that will elevate the outdoor economy and energize local dining, lodging, and events. Mary and Angel bring real visitor data and insights, showing how tourism fuels small businesses and downtown growth. With new housing, walkable streets, and a rising dining and arts scene, Richmond is rewriting the script on what a small city weekend can be. If you’ve ever said, “there’s nothing to do,” this episode proves otherwise. Discover how to become a hometown tourist with tips, events, and hidden gems you can start exploring now. Plan your trip or staycation at: www.visitrichmond.org

    1 hr

About

Inside Richmond: The City's Pulse is your go-to podcast for staying connected with the heart of Richmond, Indiana. Dive into the latest community updates, local events, city initiatives, and stories that matter most to our vibrant community. Whether you're a lifelong resident or new to the area, this podcast keeps you in tune with the pulse of Richmond!