LFUCG

Roundup: Demarcus does Romney, Richie does “Job Creation,” and more…

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November 18, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Sometimes we get behind. (Okay, we’re always behind.) And sometimes there’s so much going on it can’t all get the time it deserves. We’ve been busy, sorry. So… let’s fly through some stuff:

Ryan Alessi got the exclusive story of Mitt Romney’s recent campaign fundraiser… at which Jorts and Demarcus Cousins shared a stage with Mittens and gave the silvering fox a white UK cap. The event was organized by Romney’s KY finance chair, Mr. Joe Craft, who once told a crowd of people that everyone he went to high school with aspired only to drop out and live off the government but that he, Joe Craft, had a different dream… which was apparently to blow up mountains and rip off the people he grew up with. But that has less to do with Harrelson and Cousins showing up for Mitt. Or does it?

Continuing with basketball, if you follow the team, you must already know that Saturday’s game against a JoePa-less Penn State team is viewably only via this internet and only then if you have the correct internet provider. A lot of people are freaked out by this. What I find surprising is that they’ve never encountered this before. As a roving UK fan, I have crammed myself into all manner of places in order to find a game on a big(ger) screen and have seen many, many times, the internet-only ESPN3 games funneled through a series of tubes into regular televisions… most particularly at Jack Dempsey’s, the UK alumni bar in NYC. The HL article on this conundrum is sad mostly because a series of bars and restaurants have no idea what to do and only Pazzo’s has taken the time to figure out what is really really simple. So… Pazzo’s is going to be crazy tomorrow and every place else has about 24 hours to figure out how to connect the teevee to the internet.

And… continuing with basketball!… it appears Richie Farmer has blown one more thing handily — in the waning days of his failed run at Lt. Governor alongside (outgoing) State Senate President David Williams, Farmer hired his girlfriend at $5,000 a month. I would’ve dated Richie for $2,000 a month but perhaps I don’t have all the qualifications for the job Richie was trying to create.

Less basketbally (sorry, really), the LFUCG approved of the Gray/Fischer Lexi/ville “Super Region.” Which was a super surprising move on their part and an all-round super decision. Our council members are super. Super leaders, really. But seriously, this is super (really).

And somewhat less basketbally (like, if you want to consider this story in context of the Rupp Area development, then it’s kinda basketbally), the Distillery District public meeting went down last night. I was hoping to get there but, sadly, was/am a bit under the weather and failed. So I can’t tell you any more than what this article can and, really, it tells you a lot. (One has to wonder whether Mr. Kegley enjoys the escape of covering a story like this or if he spent the whole time wondering what killer crime stories he was missing… like the next Lexington Spiderman.) In brief, plans are coming along, though slowly (or, in the parlance of such things, deliberately) and there may be a plan of some sort by Spring 2012 but it may take longer and in all, includes streetscapes, walkways, etc etc. I’ll try to get more information because obviously this ties into that larger saga down the street but for the time being, Kegley take it away.

Rand Paul is leading the charge to end the Iraq War (while the rest of the Republican Party tries to crap all over President Obama for bringing all the troops home). But how do you end a war that was never started? Bush didn’t declare it and Congress never approved it as such, the Clintons, Kerrys and Edwards of the world just voted to okay invasion and then kept paying for it, but no one made the declarative statement. Here’s a question for a Friday: Is Rand’s move most similar to me declaring that America should land on the moon, or me asking Rand Paul when he stopped beating his wife? Feel free to discuss. Other hypotheticals accepted.

Okay. That was easy. A morning’s worth of news just breezes on by. G-d bless you all and G-d bless Kentucky.

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Hiring & Firing & Resigning at LFUCG’s Environmental Quality and Public Works Division

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November 17, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Over the past week-and-half, there’s been some salivating going on. The Gray Administration’s Commissioner of Environmental Quality and Public Works resigned, saying she’d been asked to step down, and emailed people throughout LFUCG in order to fire the first shot.

The Gray Administration has kept quiet and, in response, the usual voices in LFUCG — let’s call them Team Newberry, who know a bit about obstruction and cronyism — have tried to frame the debate as if the Gray administration had something to hide.

Which is a fine place to start from — people in positions of power should be viewed skeptically, their actions questioned and transparency demanded. That’s all fine, and it’s funny that so many in Team Newberry are now figuring this out.

It should also be interesting to see how the Ed Lanes and Doug Martins handle the latest developments — in which it becomes pretty clear the Gray Administration acted diligently to protect the city; in which it becomes pretty clear Gray’s silence on the matter isn’t a matter of obfuscation but one of legality; and in which it becomes clear that some people really want to hire their husbands even after they’re told multiple times that it ain’t cool.

City officials cautioned Lexington’s former Commissioner of Environmental Quality and Public Works Cheryl Taylor at least three times not to direct city work to her husband, according to emails obtained Wednesday by the Herald-Leader.

Taylor abruptly resigned last week, saying she was asked to step down after the city began investigating whether she inappropriately tried to direct city funds to her husband.

Some of the requests to hire her husband, Robert Taylor, an electrician, were from officials in the Division of Waste Management, under Cheryl Taylor’s supervision. At least two requests were by Taylor herself, according to the transcripts released by the city in response to an open-records request from the Herald-Leader.

On at least three occasions in 2011, Law Commissioner Janet Graham emailed Taylor that her husband could not be hired as a city employee or do contract work for the city because it would violate the city’s nepotism ordinance.

Read the entire article… it is full of hilarity.

On a bright note, Ms. Taylor is well within her right now to hire her husband for anything he wants to do since she no longer works for the city. And he can now get a job with the city because she no longer works there. So… problems solved.

It’s also worth highlighting the fact that Ms. Taylor worked previously in the Newberry Administration as the Environmental Quality Commissioner overseeing Lexington’s sanitary and storm sewer system… before leaving that job to work for Kentucky American Water. It didn’t seem like a particularly good idea to bring her back to begin with and as it turns out, it probably wasn’t.

But perhaps Ms. Taylor could now get re-hired by Lexington’s corporate overlords at KAW as they seek to further screw the city’s taxpayers:

Now investor-owned Kentucky American Water has given six months notice that it’s ending its contract with the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government to collect sewer, landfill and water quality (storm water) fees for the city.

Water and sewer bills are natural companions because sewer bills are based on water consumption. Kentucky American was paid $1.6 million a year under its latest billing contract with the city.

….Meanwhile, American Water, Kentucky American’s New Jersey-based parent, says the company’s third-quarter profits were up 2.3 percent — in part because rate increases more than offset declining water consumption.

Ah… American Water forcing rate increases they don’t need as water consumption declines — Team Newberry knows all about that.

Hopefully Martin, Lane, et al., will keep all of this in mind the next time they get their tighties in a twist. Sometimes it’s easier to just excuse yourself and dig a little deeper.

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H-L Editorial: Make Two-Way Streets Happen

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November 17, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Git ‘er done!

A search through Herald-Leader archives finds near-universal support for two-way streets in Lexington’s downtown going back over a decade and studies to support the change.

Two years ago the council passed a resolution supporting two-way streets.

The question has remained: So, why hasn’t it happened?

Perhaps Mayor Jim Gray will finally answer that question. Maybe it hasn’t happened because neither the mayor nor the council has drawn a line in the asphalt and said, “make it happen.”

….more….

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Lexington’s Two-Way Future?

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November 15, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Mayor Jim Gray has long called for converting Lexington’s downtown streets from one-way highways to two-way city streets. The never-adopted Downtown Master Plan studied the question and recommended making the transition. Both of the top-shelf architects who’ve come to town in the past few months — Jeanne Gang, Gary Bates — have pushed the city to make the move. And now:

Gray, in his first major speech after taking office in January, pledged to work to get a two-way street plan implemented, saying city leaders had “jammered and jabbered about it” long enough.

On Thursday, Chris King, director of the Division of Planning, said, “We are accelerating the process.”

Last week, the city advertised for consultants to submit detailed plans to convert the four pairs of one-way streets back to two-way traffic: Short and Second, Main and Vine, High and Maxwell, and Upper and Limestone.

There will be those who will fight this. The question is how many will they be, how loud will they be, and how many of them have, as time has moved on, begun to see the error in their thinking. How many one-way advocates of the past have woken up and smelled the greenbacks? How many of them have seen towns where cars move in orderly fashions and people walk the streets? How many of them have realized that concrete racetracks do not a downtown make?

The streets went one-way around the time folks exploded into the suburbs, creating a vacuum that was filled by, well, things you just wanted to drive by very quickly. The one way streets of Lexington were designed to do just what they do — which is move people at high speeds from one side of downtown and out the other as quickly as possible, or, in some cases, move people into downtown at high speed, deliver them to a parking garage (or surface lot!) and then whisk them out again about 8 hours later unscathed.

The reality is that if people understood how to get around their own city, the ones trying to avoid downtown could do so quite easily. That’s another bad-benefit of the One Ways… no one really bothers to learn where else to go.

The Fabulous Ms. Fortune’s whole article can paint you a much larger picture, so here’s another taste, but read it all:

At a recent conference of mayors, Gray presented some ideas being pursued in Lexington to revitalize downtown and mentioned two-way streets. “The mayors of Charleston, S.C., and Minneapolis both said, ‘Just do it,’”  said.

Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak told Gray, “15 minutes after you make the change, people will be asking why you didn’t do it 25 years earlier,” Shapiro said.

Lexington’s downtown business owners, developers, bar and restaurant owners have lobbied hard for several years to convert the one-way streets to two-way, saying the conversion would help business.

Some will undoubtedly complain about the congestion of rush hour as it is right now. Bless their hearts, but that ain’t traffic. And furthermore, the real headache folks are going to face are on the giant spokes that take them back to their Superbia. Aaaaaaand, if you watch this traffic flow from the comfort of your own two feet, you’ll notice that while there is some minor congestion in the downtown area around 8AM and 5PM… it’s all pretty much gone 15 or 20 minutes later. (So, a) it’s not that bad; b) take a walk on the walkable streets, go to Shorty’s, have a coffee, browse a shop, and then get in your car at 5:15PM and you’ll find breezy streets.)

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Take a survey for Lexington Parks & Rec…

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October 27, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Via ProgressLex:

As revenues fall and expenses rise, the Division of Parks & Rec is forced to make some tough decisions in the coming months and needs YOUR voice. Please share what matters most to you – swimming pools, golf courses or summer youth programming?

Click here to complete the survey and help shape the future of our parks system.

 

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UK President, Trustees very busy…

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October 26, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

The HL’s Linda Blackford had a busy day yesterday covering the University’s Board of Trustees and various actions before that all-powerful body and its rockin’ new President. Up first…

Group asks UK to stop using coal-fired boilers for heat

Student Patrick Johnson asked the board to conduct a feasibility study on moving UK toward geothermal and solar energy, two sustainable forms of energy that don’t pollute the atmosphere.

He cited Ball State University, which is in the process of switching from four coal-fired boilers to geothermal units, which use the earth’s natural temperatures to heat and cool buildings. Ball State is estimating it will save $2 million a year after paying $65 million to $70 million to build the system.

The University spends $30M a year on energy costs, and 68% of the heat comes from coal and they spend $3.7M on that. The Board poo-pooed the idea because they’d rather pay money for buildings (more in a sec) and who wants to complicate that cozy relationship with King Coal? Is the Sun going to build a new basketball arena? Is the Wind going to sponsor our football games? Get real! [You can find out more about Ball State's geothermal transition here.]

 

UK plans $30 million dorm; long-term plan calls for 9,000 new beds

The project is the first of several during the next decade that eventually would create a campus of modern residence halls with 9,000 beds, said Capilouto, who took office 31/2 months ago. The new dorms eventually would replace most of the 5,184 beds on campus now, of which only 684 are in buildings considered modern.

Sounds good! But wait…

So over a 10-year period, dorms with about 4,200 beds would be torn down and replaced, while 4,000 new beds would be added.

The expansion would allow UK to realize a long-term goal of getting more freshmen and sophomores to live on campus. Currently, 88 percent of freshmen live at UK their first year, but only 24 percent of all underclassmen live there.

So we’re looking at a loss of 200 beds over the next decade.

And over that time the University will continue to admit more and more students, as they have continually over the past 20 years, charging them all more and more money, while denying raises to their staff and to the faculty, and pushing more and more of them into the surrounding neighborhoods. Looking around the outskirts of the university, one can only marvel at the school’s ability to cause problems in the city with no accountability. Bless their hearts.

Looking briefly at the Top 10 State Universities, one finds an interesting trend — almost all of the Top Schools that UK’s leaders claim to aspire to join house higher percentages of their students, realizing the benefits of on-campus living to educational attainment and community.

  • Berkeley — 35% | 25,000 students
  • UCLA –36% | 25,000 students
  • U. of Virginia — 43% | 16,000 students
  • U. of Michigan — 37% | 27,000 students
  • U. of North Carolina — 46% | 19,000 students
  • William & Mary — 74% | 6,000 students
  • Georgia Tech — 59% | 13,000 students
  • UC San Diego — 92% | 24,000 students
  • UC Santa Barbara — 33% | 19,000 students

Two high ranking state schools — Washington and Wisconsin — have similar on-campus levels as UK but each has 10,000 more students. The University of Kentucky has clearly not invested in on-campus housing and the moves they’re making now don’t seem aimed at changing that. There’s much more to this topic and there’s much more in Blackford’s article (including the latest on the rogue Trustee who’s pushing for ethical guidelines for the body and asking pointed questions about how many administrators the school has and how much they are getting paid… all questions the Board does not like and all questions the Board is trying to silent) — so click it.

And the third item from Ms. Blackford covers the Board’s move to bring the UK Athletics Association under its own umbrella, a move described as ‘bold’ even though its approved of by the UKAA, the Athletics Director, the school President and the Board… which smells funny.

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Occupy Lexington stands with city workers in face of increased insurance premiums **UPDATE**

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October 25, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Mr. Kegley @ the HL:

About 100 people, some with red picket signs, turned out in front of city hall Tuesday to protest a hefty increase in health insurance premiums for city workers.

The protest was organized by Lexington firefighters, however many others, including 911 employees, police, sanitation workers and city retirees, turned out to wave picket signs and block the sidewalk.

“As bad as the fire fighters have it, civilian employees have it worse because we have not had a raise in six years,” said Pam Brandenburg, president of Civil Service Employees Association.

The picketers drew honks and cheers of support from motorists and Occupy Wall Street protesters, who have set up camp just down the street for the last several weeks, drew colorful signs in support of firefighters.

“We’re just here to show solidarity,” said Mike Davis, Occupy protestor. “We’re about fair pay for all workers, especially the people that are charged with protecting us.”

The city workers’ premium is going up 100 to 150%. Kegley’s got the details so head over for it all.

On a similar note — and probably this issue will come up — the Occupy Lexington folks (who got a shout out from Michael Moore on Democracy Now! yesterday) will be Occupying City Council on Thursday evening so come out or tune into GTV3 for the fun and games.

 

***UPDATE***

The Herald has a longer, more in-depth story on the city workers’ give-and-take with City Council:

The council agreed to hold rates for six months to the rate employees are now paying for the Platinum Plan, in which most of the employees are enrolled.

That means employees will not see an increase in costs until at least June 30.

….Under an overhauled health insurance plan presented to the council at its work session last week, the monthly premium for a single employee enrolled in the Platinum Plan — in which 89 percent of the city’s employees, including police, fire and corrections, are enrolled — was set to increase from $356 this year to $633 beginning Jan. 1. Families who stayed in that plan would have seen their premiums go from the current cost of $745 a month to $1,330.

Both the head of the Civil Service Employees Association and the Firefighters Union indicated their members’ appreciation for the work of Mayor Gray and the Council to address the situation. Read on for that.

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The Rupp Area Public Meeting — an overview of current thinking

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October 19, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Early on at Buster’s last night, Stan Harvey put up a slide of an old Adolph Rupp quote about opportunity and told the crowd it was like ol’ Adolph was speaking to us from beyond the grave.

If that’s the case, perhaps it was also Adolph Rupp who poured down thunder and lightning in a deafening hard rain, at times nearly drowning out the speakers during the 90 minutes first public meeting of the Rupp Area task force.

Maybe Rupp’s message about opportunity isn’t about spending hundreds of millions of dollars to fluff Mitch Barnhart and certain others at the University of Kentucky. Maybe it’s about the opportunity to leave Rupp essentially as is, and build a great city around it.

Just as they did a month ago, each speaker made clear this Task Force isn’t about building a new arena.

“This is not about making a decision on anything,” Chairman Brent Rice told the assembled. It’s an investigation, he said.

And talking to those assembled, the folks who took the time to come down and give it a listen, another thing became clear — many people, on both the for and the against, are mistakenly debating one issue: the Arena.

Mitch Barnhart and some loud-speaking Wildcat homers are obsessed with Louisville’s YUM! Center and are posturing like nothing less is acceptable. Others are pointing out the sheer insanity of that position — and it is astonishingly short-sighted.

But there’s much more under consideration and if you talk to the folks running this show, it quickly becomes apparent that the folks in charge understand — and want — an arts and entertainment district. And you may also get the distinct impression they don’t want a new arena.

Speaker after speaker talked not of luxury boxes but of creating a walkable downtown. They spoke of an 800 seat performing arts venue, a public space with amphitheater, on and on.

But there was arena talk, too, so let’s get to it all. What did Gary Bates — head of Space Group, master planner for the Arts & Entertainment District — have to say? The below is an overview. There is much more to say and to discuss, but let’s first lay out essentially what was discussed.

First and foremost, the master planner said our job and his is to turn the critiques — and there are plenty — into a positive message. Then he said he’d share with us a few dreams.

–Big Blue Madness is an amazing event. 25,000 people screaming their heads off. But afterwards… everyone disappears. How do we create a downtown that people think of as a destination? Currently, they come down, go to the event, then immediately get back in their cars and drive away. How can we retain that energy — and by retaining it, can we acclimate people to the idea of a downtown such that they come down at other times, too, not just for basketball, a circus or a concert.

Rupp is remarkable as it is because we are fitting twice as many people into the same cubic space as some new, state of the art arenas (Florida’s, YUM!, etc).

–Rupp is remarkable as it is because it sits right at the center of Lexington. It should remain there, with an iconic sense of belonging.

–Bates took us on a tour through Lexington history, with diagrams and photographs his point simply that he and his team are looking at the whole city. They are looking back across the past changes, how they affected the city and what we can learn. The Rose and Elm expansion, the Transit Center, and so forth. How they separate the city, how they could change in the future. This is not necessarily work Bates is contracted to do, but it would good of us to listen.

–There were maps showing how close the residential neighborhoods come to the core, and how small businesses are weaved throughout downtown (largely, Bates noted, north of Main).

Peoples’ perception of distance is greater than the actual distance. Bates compared Fayette Mall to downtown, the distance is roughly the same, the walk from Rupp to Library is the same as Macy’s to Dillards. But people are only willing to do one by the thousands.

It’s a 12 minute walk to campus, but it feels much longer. How can the flow of students and the foot traffic become an event, one that invites and encourages foot traffic in general, and reduces the parking and traffic burden on event’s day.

The Transpheria. Perhaps the biggest dream, a train station, a transit hub, running trains to the airport, Louisville and beyond. Look at Ann Arbor, Bates said, “it can be done.” The location: the Corman land, at the end of the Cox Street parking lot, right where the old trains station used to be. Whether or not there’s a Transpheria, all roads already lead to the Arts and Entertainment District.

The Mirror. Currently, the downtown core stretches from Rupp to Midland. Taking the same size and reflecting it down Broadway and out Manchester Street, a mirror image creates an extended core which, incidentally, exactly matches the existing Distillery TIF district. The core of this mirror is easily divided up into five minute diameters: five from the Distillery District to Rupp, five from Rupp to the GrasseyFielde and so on, with equal fives stretching up to the restaurant row north of Main and south toward the campus.

Two Way Streets. Bates was clear. The key to creating a downtown is two way streets. Vine is a freeway. Main is inhospitable. And as became evident later, the possible Rupp Area scenarios all seem to want to disrupt that backward street flow. The speed on Vine in particular is too high, hurting the city and the concrete walls are inhospitable. (This was met by loud applause.)

Town Branch. It deserves better. Bates talked often throughout the evening, and included several illustrations, of uncovering the creek currently hidden under the city and bringing it to the foreground as the positive attribute it could be.

The Cox Street Parking Lot. People see it as a drainage ditch. It doesn’t need to be. And it’s not that unusable. The Jefferson Street bridge is unneccessary. What if we removed the bridge, put the street on the ground, and turned what is now a parking lot into… the new convention center, a public space, an amphitheatre, etc. The hill the bridge connects to is not that daunting an incline. But it is daunting enough for kids in winter with sleds.

“Skybridges.” That’s what Bates calls them, and whether you call them that or “pedways,” the answer’s the same: they are barriers. We should get rid of them and we certainly don’t need any more. (The Webbs’ visionary eye for urban design sheds a tear.)

Arts Venue. They’re talking to local arts groups, the university’s arts departments and the public schools about a venue. Finding one to fit all is difficult, but creating a multi-use arts venue (or multiple locations throughout the district) is a key to bringing downtown to life.

–The Lexington Center. This is space is “difficult.” An enormous lobby, nothing about it particularly inspiring. The shops are empty. At lunch on an average day, there are about seven people eating at the Arby’s. That’s it. Bates and his team are “questioning that space.”

–Taking a wider view of the Rupp/Convention block as it is now, Bates wonders how to give the city the visual connections great cities offer, ways to see through the city demonstrating accessibility between parts (for instance, the distance between UK and Rupp seems grand in part because there’s no clear path to it, though there are acres of surface parking, if that’s your thang.) In one view, this meant knocking down everything around the Arena itself and creating an avenue between the refashioned arena and the hotel. In another, High Street curled smoothly into the Distillery District with the Jefferson Bridge sunk to the ground and the parking lot as green space.

–”If Rupp needs to expand, and it does.” There was a quote for the night. There are powerful forces calling for a new arena and those voices could basically care less about the rest of these ideas unless they are in service to the cause of a new arena. That view must be stopped. But there’s a fair question about what really needs to happen to Rupp Arena. The options being set out are and A v. B., but there’s a C. and it’s disservice to the city to overlook that, regardless of the University of Kentucky’s self-serving interest. That’s a longer discussion and should happen, but for now, I’ll leave it at that.

Building a new Rupp and a new convention center is “very difficult.” Bates made clear the obvious financial predicament that everyone but that UK-homer crew seems to realize. This is promising. It’s a further strength of the 47-member committee. The more decision makers who are forced to confront this reality, the better. Fantasyland is a fun place to put your mind, but it’s not a place to make good decisions.

The High-to-Maxwell parking ocean. Could we put residential housing here that flows naturally and meshes well with the surrounding area? Could we put a new arena there, or the convention center? Could we build the convention center underground here with open space above for convention goers and public space, a garden and/or an amphitheater, above?

Rupp Arena has “Great Bones.” This is important. The structure itself is solid. The building is built to last. Tearing that down isn’t just a loss but a waste. This ties into the larger, actual, conversation about rebuilding, renovating or just re-using.

–In one idea for a new arena, Bates showed a slide of a sports park, letting people recreate “in the proximity of greatness.” Surrounding the new arena with soccer fields, tennis and basketball courts. An urban playland. This is a very cool idea, and he showed an image of a project they are working on India, Sports City, that has a similar plan. But again, taking Bates’ overall apparent preference for not building a new arena, this one seems more like a false choice for deluded dreamers to entertain but lose.

–#FreeRupp. In tone and intent, this may well be Bates’ actual plan. Considering the arena as it is now, it is a gem of a space surrounded by an empty, soulless facade. Ripping away that nonsense and leaving the arena standing alone at its center, space is opened up around it, creating that iconic centerpiece. The level at which Bates may be taking this seriously was reinforced by the model city on display after the presentation, the downtown area in question, with Rupp sitting free and alone in a transparent cube:

The explicit point of this transparent view was almost certainly to isolate our visions on the space available surrounding the object in question. But the implicit point couldn’t be clearer.

–To further impress this, Bates went on to talk about an open modeled arena. In which you can see what is inside and into which the outside surroundings flow. His example, the Allianz soccer stadium in Munich:

–With the arena now stripped down to a stand-alone structure, Bates headed into his closing by surrounding the newfound emptiness around the transparent box with the possibilities of an expanded Triangle Park, an new set of buildings along Main, each slide successfully shutting the Vine Street connector that currently starts the race track and turns Triangle Park into an aggrandized traffic island.

Here, Bates came to a close. Rather than a laborious Q&A, he invited everyone to mingle and discuss, to approach him with questions and ideas of their own. People did, and Bates gamely listened… not dutifully, not as a show, but really seeming to listen, huddling with people beside a wall-sized map of downtown and illustrating their ideas onto the map as they spoke. And around the map, people post-it noted additional ideas.

There’s much, much more to be said about all of this, but for now, this seems enough. If you couldn’t be there, this at least offers a basic overview of the thinking and the dreaming. The discussion must continue, but it is clear that for whatever criticisms some might lob in their direction, this task force, and Mayor Gray and Gary Bates in particular, are working on something grand.

Whether Rupp’s thunderstorm was a warning or his quote about opportunity an encouragement is, at best, debatable. What is clear is Lexington could be reshaped in an image less like the concrete tombs of the past fifty years and more like a localized and local-driven city. There is something here and it’s foolish to write it off. What’s worse, though, is pretending a new arena is the solution, let alone a truly viable option.

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Time Warner taking over Insight… or we could take over the internet

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September 2, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Few weeks ago it was announced Time Warner would gobble up Insight and with it Lexington’s internet market. Some people were angry about the conglomeration, others just experienced the rational modern helplessness of corporate controlled everything… like what does it matter? What does it really change?

There’s a great article up at BizLex right now. It comes from a Roy Cornett, Jr. and it argues, basically, that Lexington has a unique opportunity to take control of its underlying economic engine rather than continuing to lease it out:

Coming on the heels of the announcement of Louisville and Lexington’s formation of the Bluegrass Economic Advancement Movement (BEAM) to team up and make the Bluegrass an attractive destination for advanced manufacturing and the 21st Century economy, the two largest cities in Kentucky served by Insight can boost our stock and standing even more.

We can choose to maintain the status quo and allow out-of-state corporations to continue to control our access to the Internet, or we can rescind the franchise agreements to the copper and fiber lying in the ground around our community and treat the Internet as the piece of infrastructure essential for our future economic growth that it is.

Just as public roads fueled the industrial revolution and the highways aided interstate commerce, an open and sophisticated fiber optic network can be used to attract new businesses to the Bluegrass.

Guaranteed quality service at reasonable rates can be a very powerful tool for economic development. If costs were allowable, a joint municipal service could incentivize businesses to locate here with ultra-low or no-cost high-speed access. In the world of advanced manufacturing, that can be powerful.

As Cornett goes on to argue, for all those who immediately complain of socialism, there is the simple and obvious counter argument — this is a pure business decision. Unlocking the power of the internet, increasing the up and down speeds that, in most communities, the cable companies keep choked off would create a powerful incentive for businesses to locate in the Bluegrass. Additionally, the move would not negatively affect businesses at large, just one large business. And, in fact, there’s no reason Time Warner couldn’t continue to charge us all increasingly crazy amounts each month to pad their bottom line, just that a municipal ISP would provide them a little competition… or in this case, a debilitating competition. Which is why the Telecoms are freaking out. As Cornett says:

[T]he telecommunication lobby has convinced 20 state legislatures to pass laws forbidding municipalities from creating their own broadband network. The most recent was North Carolina, whose state legislature banned municipal ISPs in late August. This push came because the City of Wilson, N.C. decided to build its own network. This city of 55,000 had other broadband options available, but officials felt the existing ISPs were not upgrading their networks sufficiently to ensure that the city could compete in a global economy.

Read the whole thing, spread the idea around and, if you so choose, contact Mayor Gray, Mayor Fischer, your city council person and see what happens.

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Maxwell bike lane extension gets axed

3 comments
August 23, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

The Maxwell bike lane that was apparently expanded by accident across Woodland to Kentucky Ave. in Lexington’s “Woodland Triangle” is getting cut back to its original size.

After some business owners and landlords complained last week about the loss of parking spots, supporters of the bike lane gathered signatures from tenants — resident and commercial — on the block to request the bike lane remain.

This created competing petitions, one from building owners (including Ramsey’s and the Black Swan) and one from non-owners, and a bit of a logistical hang-up.

If the Council did nothing today, the mistaken bike stripe would be removed and 8 parking spots would be replaced. But was the city now required to honor the petition in support of and requesting the bike lane?

There was a lot of Council sentiment from the usual suspects speaking up for the land owners, with Doug Martin complaining about the “sacrifice” the complaining businesses were experiencing. Ed Lane said he “didn’t think it was fair” to turn a half-block of parking into a bike lane.

Representing the land owners was Nick Nicholson of Stoll Keenon and Ogden, who stated SKO’s address as if it mattered, and he made an impassioned plea on their behalf, saying the new petition was “not representative of the people.”

The Council listened to all this then debated what to do, including seeking clearer guidelines for future such petitions from the parking authority, and sorting the interests of landlords, business owners, home owners and tenants (with the prevailing sentiment seeming to fall on behalf of landlords).

Council-at-Large member Steve Kay questioned whether now that the city had an apparently valid petition before it, was the bike lane itself was now valid.

No one — especially Ed Lane — liked that idea very much but as a point of order, Kay was quite clear: If the petition was in fact valid and the city was going to spend the money replacing the bike lane with the old parking spots, were they then going to be forced to again erase the parking spots and put the bike lane back in.

Lane and Julian Beard both complained about the role of petitions in governance, with Beard insisting that “Petitions are for guidance. We make the law!”

The full council ended up voting — with only two ‘nays,’ Kay and Diane Lawless — to get rid of the bike lane. So… your dreams of a safe ride to the park (or even continuing down High Street) come to a screeching halt at the already dangerous for cars, let alone bicycles, intersection of Maxwell, High and Kentucky.

My favorite part of the whole discussion came at the end, just after the vote, when Doug Martin got up abruptly and strode over to Kevin Stinnett. As Vice Mayor Gorton wrapped up the one topic to move on to the next, Martin could be seen gesturing emphatically and speaking in a hush to Stinnett. Martin then stalked out of the room and Stinnett’s face, which remained quite still the entire time, then — after just a pause — melted into what appeared to be a miffed smile.

So that was either a Martin joke or a classic Clown attack.

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