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Showing posts with label Jerry Stricker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jerry Stricker. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

COVINGTON RAISES VOICE IN BRIDGE BATTLE

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THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
by Michael Monks 
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Additional seating was required to accommodate the
oversize crowd
The turnout Wednesday evening at the Northern Kentucky Convention Center dwarfed the crowd reports from the same presentation the night before at Longworth Hall in Cincinnati. The concern on the Kentucky side of the river has reason to be much higher as the preferred design for the Brent Spence Bridge corridor project favors its neighbors to the north. The presentation by transportation officials from both states demonstrates plans to make access to Covington and several of the city's features more difficult and leaders of Covington past and present pleaded for changes, promising catastrophe otherwise.
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"Without access, Covington would be wounded a second time, maybe mortally," said City Commissioner Steve Casper, referencing the original Interstate 75 that divided West Covington (now Botany Hills) from the rest of the city. Casper's deadly prognosis for Covington without the city's desired changes to the bridge's plans was echoed multiple times by members of the 350-person crowd. 
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"These are vital requests concerning the economic vitality of Northern Kentucky's largest city," said Brent Cooper, chairman of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce and owner of C-Forward on Madison Avenue. 
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"The best real estate location in the world doesn't mean a thing if you can't get to it," said Chris Penn, co-owner of Cock & Bull restaurant in Mainstrasse. 
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"Cincinnati has raised objection to Covington's access to the Clay Wade Bailey Bridge," said City Commissioner Steve Frank of of that city's plans for its streetcar. "I don't care what they want with their toy train!"
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Citizens check out the various aspects of the plans
The stakes really are that high, Covington leaders argue. Transportation officials recommend what is called Plan I for the new bridge which eliminates direct access to 5th Street when traveling northbound on the interstate. Drivers would be forced to exit at 12th Street and then travel on a city street with three stop lights before arriving at 5th. The City wants direct access to 5th from a collector distributor. While southbound travelers would have direct access to 5th and 9th Streets, those drivers would have to make their decision to exit in Covington one mile north of the river near the Cincinnati Museum Center. The City wants a direct ramp to 9th Street from the interstate. 
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Additionally, Plan I closes the connection from Pike Street to Lewis Street, eliminating important access to Devou Park and makes Goebel Park Pool in Mainstrasse unusable. The bridge's threat to Covington's vitality is concerning to those who lived through the first time that the interstate harmed the city. "We suffered a blow when Florence Mall was opened," said former City Commissioner Jerry Stricker. With this bridge plan, "more businesses will shut down, more residents will move out and Covington will become a ghost town. Covington will no longer be Northern Kentucky's largest city. It will set the city back and it will never recover."
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"The federal government, they view this as an interstate only but this affects us," said City Commissioner Sherry Carran. "Everything we ask for is feasible, it's not pie in the sky."
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"Covington is special, it has a charm," said Mayor Chuck Scheper. "You don't see Covington's charm until you get to the bridge."
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One such charming landmark is the Carroll Chimes Bell Tower in Goebel Park adjacent to Designs Direct, a business that redeveloped and expanded the former Northern Kentucky Visitors and Convention Bureau building. "Businesses (in Mainstrasse) are fragile and any loss of income could put those businesses under," said Dave Meyer of Designs Direct. 
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"We know once they see the river, the church spires, the businesses, they're going to want to get off here but by then it will be too late," warned City Manager Larry Klein. 
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The bridge itself is only 4% of the entire length of the corridor project but the immediate area most impacted by it is almost entirely in Covington, which would create a ripple effect up and down Northern Kentucky's river cities. "Anything that disenfranchises Covington, disenfranchises every city on the riverfront," said Jack Moreland, President of Southbank Partners, an organization that spearheads development activities in the river cities. 
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At least one speaker did not view the plan as all gloom and doom. Retired Covington police officer and 2012 city commission candidate Neil Gilreath suggested that the $2.5 billion price tag on the entire project could be narrowed down by spending some money on work on the I-471 bridge between Newport and Cincinnati and shifting some highway traffic flow for suburban drivers seeking access to I-275 that way, which, he says, would also increase east-to-west traffic in the cities. 
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That $2.5 billion price tag is still a long way from the $100 million currently on hand to fund the bridge project but while the actual completion could still be many years away, the fear for Covington's future is here now. "I am fearful that we are going to see this city die," said Candance Witte, a resident of the Riverside Plaza in Licking Riverside who referenced the Covington riverfront's recent history as a parking lot that now boasts of multiple small skyscrapers. "I have one question for the people from Frankfort. Did you get off at 5th Street (to get to the Convention Center) or did you come down 9th Street? And when you go back will you go to 5th Street or up 9th?"
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LOTS OF PHOTOS FROM THE MEETING ARE BELOW, JUST CLICK THE LINK!
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Friday, April 6, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- FRIDAY MORNING 6 APR

by Michael Monks 
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THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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in case you missed...
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THURSDAY EVENING'S NEWS
City expresses concern over Brent Spence Bridge plans (a pool may be eliminated and access to Devou Park may be affected); Steps being taken to involve residents in preventing a repeat of the St. Patrick's Day fallout in Mainstrasse; One Covington neighborhood warns of cars being "egged"; And, in case you missed, a second candidate drops out the city commission race. Click the link for those stories and more. 
AMAZON WAREHOUSE PUSHES WORKERS TO PHYSICAL LIMITS
The Seattle Times takes a look at a Campbellsville, Kentucky warehouse (Amazon has another one in Boone County): 
"The Amazon motto is 'Work hard, have fun and make history,' and that's what we did," said Wethington, who worked for more than a decade at the Campbellsville fulfillment center before she was fired last year for a safety violation.
But over time, said former workers at Campbellsville, production pressure from headquarters intensified amid constant turnover.
As those tensions spilled onto the warehouse floor, Amazon gained a reputation as a difficult place to earn a living.
"There would be phone conferences [with Seattle], and all this screaming, about production numbers. That was always the problem; the production numbers weren't high enough," said a former safety manager with oversight of the warehouse who spoke on condition of anonymity. "This was just a brutal place to work."
Former managers said the company created a work environment where employees who complained about conditions, including excessive heat, risked retaliation.
After nearly two years on the job, one former manager was troubled enough about conditions to write an email to an Amazon regional vice president. He says he detailed concerns about unreasonable expectations of workers during extremely hot days, how production rates were set and other issues.
A week later, the former manager says, he was accused of a minor rules infraction and given the choice of leaving the company or getting fired.
"I said that this makes no sense," he recalled. "There were huge problems at Campbellsville, and I wanted them to do an investigation." The tough tactics extended to the treatment of sick and injured workers, according to a former human-resources employee.
"They would have meetings on how we could get rid of people who were hurt. It was horrible," she said. "I would try to find them [the workers] light-duty jobs that they could do, and they [managers] would say no. They wanted the workers to exhaust their time off so they could fire them."
Read it all. 
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LICKING RIVER TRAILS TO HOST EVENT TO BEGIN CONSTRUCTION
From Vision 2015: 
Vision 2015, in partnership with the City of Covington and our trail funders Humana, the R.C. Durr Foundation, Kenton Conservancy, the Recreational Trails Program and Jerry Stricker invite you and your family to attend a celebratory event marking the beginning of construction on the Licking River Trails. Saturday, May 5, 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. A short program will begin at 11:00 a.m. At the Corner of Levassor and Easter Avenues in Covington (just behind Holmes High School) Loads of activities, prizes and give-aways including a bike raffle, a band and entertainment for the entire family!

To see more photos from the trails shot last week during a large clean-up effort that was filmed by KET, click the link below. 
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NEW ART GALLERY TO OPEN TONIGHT IN MAINSTRASSE
One of the features of the planned Hamelin's Square at 6th & Philadelphia Streets will debut tonight. David Jones will celebrate the opening of his art gallery at 526 Philadelphia Street tonight from 5:30 - 8:30PM. For more about all that's planned for Hamelin Square, click the link below. 
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QUICKIES
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State Senator: 2012 session in Frankfort "one of the worst" cn|2
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Copper thieves cost Kentucky community phone service WKYT 
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Manager of a Kentucky Kroger shot by shoplifter Local 12 
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At UK, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas talks about his early life and the court Herald-Leader 
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KENTUCKY IS BEST AND WORST OF NCAA BASKETBALL
So says a New York Post columnist:
This Kentucky team may have been fronted by a university, nothing else related to college, but it knew how to play winning, attractive five-man ball, none of that “Gotta get it into your star’s hands” plan played to the beat of a funeral drum and sold by simplistic media voices.
Of course, The New York Post represents only the worst of the media. 
NY Post/Phil Mushnick 
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SEE ALSO: State of Kentucky shone during NCAA Tournament Herald-Leader 
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SEE ALSO: Professor teaches leadership through basketball WKYT 
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NKU grad to debut with White Sox Maysville Ledger Independent 
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IRS offers eight tips to remain in its good graces Business First 
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Help on the path to losing a pet Cincinnati Enquirer 
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LUCKY DOGS (AND CATS!) ADOPTED SO FAR IN APRIL AT KENTON SHELTER

See more here.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

DOCUMENTS INDICATE NO REAL PLAN FOR ORIGINAL ARTS DISTRICT

by Michael Monks 
Find us on Facebook: The River City News @ Facebook
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Documents obtained by The River City News show that there was no research or precedent used in creating Covington's Arts District in 2005. On August 24, Covington City Commission approved the rezoning of the Arts District back to Central Business District. The Kenton County Planning Commission was supposed to hear the issue last month, but that was postponed without further explanation from the Commission. Now it is revealed that City staff has discovered a number of issues with the current Arts District, including the facts that there was never any real study performed, there was no precedent established in other cities, and that the planning commission was never used in crafting the zoning for Arts District in 2005. 

From a memo dated May 4, 2011:

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

GOOD LUCK, CHUCK: COVINGTON'S NEW MAYOR IS NAMED

by Michael Monks
Find us on Facebook: The River City News @ Facebook
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Charles R. "Chuck" Scheper is sworn in as
Covington's Mayor
"So much for retirement," Covington businessman Chuck Scheper said from the podium at City Hall just moments after he was approved as the city's new mayor. "I want to thank (former Mayor) Denny Bowman," Scheper continued, explaining that Bowman asked him thirteen years ago to lead an analysis on how to reform Covington's government and make it more efficient. That request led to 1999's "Scheper Report", a thoroughly researched document that Scheper said offered over $5 million in savings following the efforts of twenty people spending over a thousand hours to arrive at ninety recommendations.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN SEARCH FOR COVINGTON'S NEXT MAYOR

by Michael Monks
News & Notes from the quest to replace Bowman (all independently confirmed):
  • One local prominent businessman/philanthropist contacted by a city commissioner last weekend is not interested in being appointed to replace Denny Bowman as Mayor of Covington. A source close to the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the businessman declined to participate in the process of replacing Bowman. Since he is not throwing his name into consideration, The River City News will protect the businessman's identity.
  • A member of Governor Steve Beshear's administration has directly contacted each city commissioners (EDIT: Commissioner Casper says he was not contacted by anyone from the Governor's office. I've apologized to him for the error and I apologize to you.) on behalf of former Commissioner Jerry Stricker who has publicly expressed interest in filling the remainder of Bowman's term. Stricker, who lives in the Ascent, served three terms on the city commission but declined to run for reelection in 2010. Instead, Stricker threw his support behind Steve Frank and Steve Casper who were both elected to their first terms. If the current commission does not appoint a new mayor within thirty days of October 4 (when Bowman's resignation was accepted) the issue goes to Governor Steve Beshear. The River City News does not know of the Governor's personal preference, just of the phone calls from someone who works in the administration.
  • Local businessman Chuck Scheper whose name emerged as a potential replacement for Bowman and who gained fame in municipal circles for his 1999 "Scheper Report" on how to reform Covington's government effectiveness, supported Commissioners Frank and Casper in their 2010 election bid. According to the online edition of the Kentucky Registry of Election Finance, Scheper contributed $100 to Casper's campaign during the primary and $250 to Frank's campaign in the general election. Scheper also contributed $100 to the 2010 commission primary campaign of Damian Sells who dropped out before the general election.  
 Tips? Story ideas? Email me: mmonks@deanmproductions.com

SEE ALSO:
CARRAN IN CHARGE AS EFFORT TO REPLACE BOWMAN OFFICIALLY BEGINS
CITY ADDS 12 NEW FIREFIGHTERS TO QUELL OVERTIME COSTS