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Showing posts with label Ohio River. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ohio River. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

BERNSTEIN FAMILY PLANS TO REOPEN THE MIKE FINK

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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Jimmy Bernstein
More than twenty years ago, the Conway family of Cincinnati had just sold off its manufacturing business and was looking for a new enterprise to jump into. They decided upon a TGI Friday's franchise at the newly built Covington Landing but the restaurant chain had a stipulation for new franchisees that someone with restaurant experience be involved. The Conways tapped the Bernsteins, operators of BB Riverboats and the Mike Fink floating restaurant, to come aboard and help with their entry into food service. Now, Bob Conway says his family has the second-largest collection of TGI Friday franchises in the country in addition to Newport's Hofbrahaus, Karlo's Bistro in Florence, and multiple McAllister's Delis but as he sets out on yet another new endeavor, Conway is once again collaborating with his old friends, the Bernsteins, only this time it's that family in need of a partner.
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After thirty-five years the Mike Fink served its last meals on Valentine's Day 2008 and since then has mostly remained at its once thriving spot on the shoreline of the Ohio River in the front yard of Covington's Historic Licking Riverside neighborhood. The steady deterioration has drawn the ire of many residents in this posh part of the city dominated by its blocks of antebellum mansions and towering condo developments. Jimmy Bernstein and Bob Conway visited the neighborhood association during its monthly meeting Wednesday night and shared some welcome news: the Mike Fink is on pace to reopen in time for the Cincinnati Reds Opening Day next spring.
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"When we closed, we couldn't compete because the boat was run down and we didn't have the capital to invest," Bernstein said. "But I've matured greatly over the last few years." Closing the Fink was not originally on Bernstein's menu. In fact, in the summer of 2007, six months before the closure, Bernstein had applied for and received approval for plans to renovate the boat once operated by his parents. But the hull of the boat which was built in 1930 was quickly deteriorating and though Bernstein contends that it was never in any danger of sinking a surveyor recommended that the Fink be closed, especially after developing multiple pin leaks.
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The hull was replaced during a trip to Portsmouth, Ohio and should be good for another eighty years, Bernstein told his longtime residential neighbors. Now, the goal is to have some business going on inside it. "In order to compete today you have to keep your eye out, know what's new, appeal to all ages, and have a great product," Bernstein said after acknowledging and empathizing with the neighborhood's concerns. "We just want to serve great food. We want to be your neighborhood restaurant. We want to give Licking Riverside preferential treatment and always have a table for you."
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If there were any bad feelings from the neighbors toward the Mike Fink Wednesday night they were hard to notice as most of Bernstein's remarks were met with enthusiastic applause. But before those tables are available to neighbors or anyone else, financing has to be achieved and that has yet to happen, though Conway is optimistic that their estimated $1.5 - $2.5 million investment will be backed by a bank. Conway is already turning some of his assets into cash so that painting on the Mike Fink's exterior can begin right away.
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"We need to get moving on restoring the outside immediately," Conway said. The color scheme will be the familiar black and white, the traditional colors of an old-fashioned steamboat. On the inside, "there will be lots of character to it," Conway promised. "We want people to come in and discover different areas of the boat and its unique characteristics."
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There are some external issues still facing the boat's reopening in addition to the pursuit of financing, the most pressing of which are in the hands of nature. Bernstein explained that the Ohio River fluctuates from twenty-six to fifty feet about three times a year and that debris dumped from Licking River goes right into the Ohio with its first stop being the Fink. He is working with the City of Covington on developing drift deflectors, though current drawings place them at the Roebling Suspension Bridge, too far west to be of any help to the restaurant. In any case, a crew from BB Riverboats will be on regular patrol to maintain any debris that accumulates. Trash on the land is also an issue and neither Conway nor Bernstein is sure yet where to place the necessary dumpsters. 
Brad Bernstein
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Back on the inside of the boat when the kitchen is cooking again, a third generation member of the Bernstein riverboat family will be serving up its new menu. Brad Bernstein, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America who studied in New York and Napa Valley, will be the Mike Fink's chef. He cut his teeth in the boat's kitchen before earning his formal education, though his time on the floating restaurant allowed him to skip many classes at the exclusive school. Brad was inspired in California by the farm-to-table movement and hopes to incorporate that into the relaunched Mike Fink. In its first incarnation the Fink ordered a lot of wholesale products, but this time will be different. 
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"We'll be getting our product locally, taking it in its raw form and creating wonderful meals from it," Brad said, promising slow-cooked entrees over wood fire. He also looks forward to dockside service, a feature that will bring other boats on the Ohio River back to their long-dormant friend, the Mike Fink, ready to breath and serve once again.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- SATURDAY 21 JULY

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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BUSY, IMPORTANT CITY COMMISSION MEETING ON TUESDAY
Another part of the Center City Action Plan will be presented with a focus on improving the City's retail situation; Six to retire from Covington Fire Dept and one from the Police Dept; The City sells 3 homes for a buck and may now share more than $120,000 (in federal funding) for their rehab; Plus, new light fixtures possible for Mainstrasse and Riverside Drive. Details at the link.
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HELP REBUILD THE SIXTH DISTRICT PLAYGROUND TODAY
The community needs you Saturday as Sixth District School and its partners (such as Gateway College) begin the work of rebuilding its playground that was scorched on June 24. Everyone can give something: time, ideas, resources, and money. To raise some cash, there will be an event at the school (1901 Maryland Ave in Austinburg) on Saturday from 11:00AM - 2:00PM. Some ways money will be raised: City Commissioner Steve Casper and Covington Independent Public Schools Superintendent Lynda Jackson will be in a dunking booth and for two bucks you can take a few shots at them. You can adopt a plant for $2, $5, or $10. Volunteers from Seven Hills Church will be there to help sand the area around what is left of the playground equipment. By the way, Lowe's will match what is raised up to $5,000. Get down there and help out!
(Original story with photos: Fire destroys playground at Covington School)
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DON'T MISS FRIDAY'S NEWS & THE WEEKEND PREVIEW
"The one big loser in the prohibition of cannabis has been the truth," writes a KY veteran; Plus, a look ahead to a busy, active weekend. Click it.
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QUICKIES
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Man pleads guilty in Kenton Co to attempting to meet teen girl for sex Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Kentucky man indicted on child porn charges press release  
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The vehicle of Fugitive ex-Army Ranger that fled his rape trial is found in Georgetown WKYT 
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RELATED: Rape victim unable to move on with life while accused rapist is still on the loose Herald-Leader  
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Kentucky switching to one drug for executions Herald-Leader 
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Delta flight makes emergency landing in Louisville Courier-Journal 
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Covington program teaches teens about jobs Cincinnati Enquirer
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PHOTOS: Wounded Kentucky soldier welcomed home Herald-Leader 
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Tax reform to get public hearing in NKY Cincinnati Enquirer 
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KY League of Cities bond program updated WTVQ 
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Kentucky One gets nearly $700,000 from Catholic Health for health services in the Commonwealth WAVE 
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KY represented in national education publication WFPL 
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Governor Steve Beshear talks about his trip to Asia YouTube 
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Popular Democrat Crit Luallen still mulling a run for Governor in 2015 cn|2 
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Belmont winner Union Rags retired after season-ending injury Courier-Journal 
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WHY US CITIES ARE GOING BANKRUPT
CNN's Fareed Zakaria offers his analysis:
The truth is America is sacrificing its future to pay for its past. To keep up with burgeoning pensions, states and cities are slashing services. It's also feeding into the unemployment problem. State and local governments have 445,000 fewer workers today than in 2007. Even if you exclude teachers from that number, we have 231,000 fewer workers.
For decades now, local governments have doled out patronage by increasing pension benefits – these costs impact the budget years later, when the officials who gave the benefits are safely retired themselves. We're now having to reckon with those choices.
CNN
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JOHNSON & JOHNSON TO SETTLE KICKBACK SCHEME WITH OMNICARE
The formerly Covington-based health care behemoth Omnicare isn't the only shady business in America and teamed up with other shady businesses that are now paying for that partnership:
Johnson & Johnson will likely pay as much as $2.2 billion to settle claims that it promoted the antipsychotic medication Risperdal for unapproved uses, the Wall Street Journal reported. The settlement would also resolve an investigation into whether New Brunswick, N.J.-based J&J paid kickbacks to Covington-based (NYSE: OCR) Omnicare Inc.
Business Courier/James Ritchie 
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DOES RAISING TAXES ON THE RICH HURT SMALL BUSINESSES?
There is very little evidence to support that oft-cited claim:
“The arguments against allowing the high-end tax cuts to expire on schedule echo those made against President Clinton’s proposed 1993 tax increases, which set marginal rates at the levels to which they are set to return when the Bush rate cuts expire. Critics claimed at the time that those tax increases would seriously harm economic growth and even send the economy back into recession. As it turned out, job creation and economic growth proved significantly stronger following the 1993 tax increases than following the 2001 Bush tax cuts. Further, small businesses generated jobs at twice the rate during the Clinton years than they did under the Bush tax code.”
Full story: Washington Post 
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FED RESERVE OFFICIAL SAYS CINCI/NKY GROWTH IS OUTPACING NATION
WNKU's report from the Covington Business Council's monthly luncheon:
(Thursday), Dr. LaVaughn Henry, who runs the Cincinnati branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, spoke about the economy at a meeting of the Covington Business Council. After his address, he talked with WNKU's Steve Hirschberg. Henry says the Cincinnati regional economy is doing better than the nation as a whole in recovering from the Great Recession.
Listen to why: WNKU 
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COVINGTON URBAN PARTNERSHIP SCORES $20,000 GRANT
From the Covington Business Council Foundation/Urban Partnership:
The Covington Business Council Foundation, on behalf of the Urban Partnership of Covington (UP), has received a $20,000 grant from The Greater Cincinnati Foundation (GCF) to fund UP’s pilot clean and safe program which resulted in the removal of more than 40 tons of litter and the elimination of more than 700 instances of graffiti in the program’s first 15 months of operation.  
The program is a demonstration project. UP leaders and fellow property owners later this year plan to petition fellow land owners to agree to be assessed on the value, square footage and frontage of their properties. In addition to economic development and beautification services, the funds from the assessment would also pay for enhanced maintenance which is exactly the work done in the pilot program. UP has raised over $200,000 from individuals and charitable foundations in the past year to fund the effort.  
Partnership Executive Director Pat Frew says the donation is greatly appreciated. “To have a leading philanthropic organization in our community like the Greater Cincinnati Foundation validate our work with such a generous gift, it encourages our stakeholders and strengthens our resolve that our work is helping to, if not save Covington, certainly re-make it an attractive destination for businesses and residents.”
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ARTS COUNCIL PROFILES CITY'S DESIGNATION AS CULTURAL DISTRICT
Earlier this year Covington joined Berea, Danville, Horse Cave, and Paducah as Kentucky's first designated cultural districts:
By definition, a cultural district is a well-recognized, labeled, mixed-use area of a community – whether small and rural or large and urban – with myriad cultural amenities. Some 100-plus U.S. cities have planned or started cultural districts, using arts and culture to spawn revitalization efforts. Funded by the Kentucky General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, the KAC developed the Kentucky Cultural District Certification Program to encourage communities to form partnerships that link culture with economic development.
(snip)
Another river city rife with artsy venues, Covington also boasts a redeveloped waterfront with floodwall murals. Its cultural attractions embrace its German heritage (MainStrasse Village), religious roots (the splendid Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption), architecture (Roebling Suspension Bridge), history (James A. Ramage Civil War Museum) and arts (Carnegie Visual and Performing Arts Center).
Like the other four Cultural District cities, Covington had city leaders that recognized the community’s arts and cultural assets as economic boosters early on.
“We were ready when the Cultural District program came along,” said Natalie Bowers, art director for the City of Covington. “Essentially, it gave our cultural entities a platform to all work together. All we had to do was fill in the paperwork.”
Having that designation speaks to the city’s quality of life, adding to its marketability for business and tourism, said Barbara Dozier, vice-president of sales and marketing for the Northern Kentucky Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Read about the other cities, too: The Lane Report.
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WOULD YOU SWIM IN THE OHIO RIVER?
It appears that more people are:
Jonathan Grinder got some strange looks a few years back when he started pitching the idea of a race for swimmers across the Ohio River. He was relatively new in town and figured people here would jump at the chance to dive into the region’s greatest natural resource. Anyone can swim in a pool, he told friends. This would be something special. The response he heard most often: “You’re nuts.”
“People kept saying, ‘No, no, no, you can’t do this,’ ” Grinder recalled. “There’s this perception that the river is dangerous and unhealthy to swim in.” Grinder was undaunted.  
Read it: Cincinnati Enquirer/Dan Horn 
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MORE QUICKIES
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Kentucky assault victim's Twitter account may land her in jail Courier-Journal 
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Children at a daycare are found unattended in a hot attic with 102-degree temperature WKYT 
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EDITORIAL: RICHMOND SHOULD STAND FOR FAIRNESS (LIKE COVINGTON)
An editorial from the Herald-Leader:

But efforts to extend civil rights protections in Kentucky to include sexual orientation and gender identity have not succeeded. So, Kentucky is left with a patchwork.
That's why a lesbian couple kissing in a park would be protected under the law in Lexington, Louisville and Covington but had no recourse last week in Richmond when they were kicked out of the park.
And that's why Richmond should move quickly to pass a fairness ordinance and extend basic rights to gay, lesbian and transgendered people.
Full editorial: Herald-Leader 

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TV star Meredith Baxter talks to The River City News publisher
The first-ever CNKY Scene GLBT Film Festival kicks is this weekend in Cincinnati with several great films lined up for presentation. The special guest is Mereditch Baxter who you may remember as the mom on TV's Family Ties and who narrates a documentary being shown at the festival about a raid on a gay bar in Fort Worth, Texas. On Saturday, Baxter will be at the festival for a question and answer session following the film and I am thrilled to have been asked to moderate the discussion. Catch us at Know Theatre on Jackson Street on Over-the-Rhine starting at 6:00PM. -Michael Monks
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WAS CINCINNATI'S BUNBURY MUSIC FEST TOO WHITE?
That's what a CityBeat reporter says of the first-time festival, which was a smashing success in drawing thousands to Downtown Cincinnati:
Seeing clips of and reading band line-ups for the Bunbury Music Festival reminded me of what a large-scale white boys’ club Cincinnati is when it comes to live music.
A real shame in a city that’s given the world funk, jazz, hip hop and gospel, all indie music because none of it’s country or crossover rap.
Believe me, I do understand the economics of segregation, unintentional or otherwise. But well-intended segregation does not make it any less glaring or annoying.
You’d think music — that so-called “universal language” — could be the adhesive every once in awhile to bind us.
Oh, that’s right, The World Choir Games. But I digress.
Bunbury founder and organizer Bill Donabedian is in fact a great idea man. I wrote a short profile of him a few years back when he was the managing director of the 3CDC-controlled Fountain Square and he programmed and booked events for the city’s living room, wrestling control from all the freaks and bigots who’d only had to get a temporary permit to spout vitriol or erect a cross.
And the square did come alive under Donabedian’s management.
But Bunbury is Donabedian’s bigger, wetter dream of bringing to Cincinnati “its own Lollapalooza” as he put it, an idea so derivative and regressive, Donabedian paid homage to Lollapalooza founder Perry Farrell by paying him and his band Jane’s Addiction to headline Bunbury’s opening night.

How incestuously 1990s of him.
Read it all, and then read the comments (if you dare): City Beat/Kathy Y. Wilson 
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NKU FEATURED IN NEW YORK TIMES
More applause for UpTech, the small business incubator at Northern Kentucky University, even if it goes without a direct mention and even if the mention overall is only fleeting:
Even nontechie campuses like Northern Kentucky University, Duke and Syracuse have jumped in the pool, recently adding or planning to add start-up incubators.
NKU was just mentioned in The New York Times in a sentence that included Syracuse and Duke. I hope that means the value of my degree just went up. I've always referred to NKU as The Harvard of Campbell County. Guess I was right!
The New York Times


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- WEDNESDAY EVENING 11 JULY


THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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COVINGTON COP SAVES 3 PEOPLE, ANIMALS FROM BURNING HOME
One of our police officers is credited with helping to save three lives, alerting people inside a burning home to get out. He also saved the dog and three birds. Meanwhile, a man inside the home says he was targeted by an arsonist. Full story at the link.
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SCHOOL DISTRICT CHOOSES SHERIFFS OVER POLICE TO SAVE MONEY
EXCLUSIVEThe Covington School Board will save more than $100,000 by using the Kenton Co. Sheriff's Office instead of the Covington Police Department to provide school resource officers. The vote put a dent in the City's budget, but that may already be accounted for, and on the upside, more officers are coming to the streets. Full story at the link.
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COVINGTONIANS RETURN AFLOAT "RAFTER CLYDE"
Here is a great story about riverboat captain Don Sanders, a Covington native and river dweller, who has purchased a small steamboat and journeyed down the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, documenting the trip on Facebook. Via WKRC:

Don Sanders's brother Bob Sanders has a law office in Covington and his nephew Rob Sanders is the Kenton County Commonwealth's Attorney.
Follow the Rafter Clyde on Facebook Click Here 
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DON'T MISS THIS MORNING'S NEWS
Firefighters blame budget cuts for delayed response to overnight fire in Covington; Transportation officials say Covington's "last chance" exit would cause crashes; WCPO anchor and Covington resident Katherine Nero announces she has breast cancer. Plus, a Kentucky woman sues porn companies over alleged extortion. Those stories and much more at the link.
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CAN CITY DWELLERS HAVE NICE THINGS?
Recently, The River City News published this photo:
Those discarded cigarette butts litter the sidewalk near a bus stop on one Covington's most important thoroughfares, Pike Street. Trouble is, the photo could have been snapped on many blocks around town where people who don't seem to give a damn just throw their trash on the ground for others to pick up. Others rarely pick it up. Covington is filthy. But, it's not alone:
The other day I was down at the beach in Coney Island. The tragedy of the commons was all around me – evidence aplenty that we cannot, in fact, have nice things. People were tossing their trash right next to their beach towels, and as the tide came in, the garbage was swept into the water, where it bobbed alongside all the little kids and old folks and parents and teenagers who were splashing in the waves, finding relief from the brutal heat.
No one besides me seemed to care about the trash. Everyone else appeared quite happy with the way things were. I picked up what I could, clearing a little patch of beach around myself and my son, because I really couldn’t bear to see the detritus get sucked under into the only Atlantic we have. I felt like a chump. That is part of the tragedy of the commons – that stinging sense of embarrassment at trying to make something nice when no one else gives a damn.
I’m familiar with this feeling from a lifetime of living in cities and being a total civic nerd. Fortunately, it doesn’t really bother me any longer.
Halfway up the beach was a corral full of garbage cans, with signs telling people not to litter, admonishing visitors to keep “your beach” clean. I dumped a couple of bags of garbage in those cans, wondering if and how more people could be convinced to do the same, how the sweating masses of New York could come to feel that “their beach,” and their ocean, should not be filled with junk.
I’ll confess: It wasn’t a high point for my relationship with my hometown.
Raise your hand if you've had a similar experience in Covington.
READ THE FULL STORY: Can City Dwellers Have Nice Things?
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QUICKIES
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Former state legislator, teacher dies one year after head injury suffered while breaking up a fight cn|2
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Kentucky ends fiscal year with $83 million left over Herald-Leader
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KY falls to 36 on CNBC list of best states in which to do business Business Courier 
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Government contract review examines if Kentucky is getting biggest bang for its buck cn|2 
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Attorney General Jack Conway's cyber crimes unit turns 4 press release 
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Kentucky's Department of Financial Institutions turns 100 press release 
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PREGNANT LESBIAN AND PARTNER BOOTED FROM KY PARK AFTER KISS
A Kentucky woman and her female partner are expecting a baby in September and like many of their heterosexual counterparts, hired a photographer to take maternity pictures. After a gatekeeper at the park witnessed the couple kiss, they were ordered to leave:
“They were a little reluctant, and they kissed so quickly that I wasn’t even able to take a picture of it,” she said.
After that, the park gatekeeper approached them again.
“He said that we had to leave and that it was inappropriate,” Miller-Poole said.
Miller-Poole’s husband accompanies her on all photo shoots, she said.
“He talked to the man and said that if it was because they were two women, that he wanted to know,” Miller-Poole said. “The man said, ‘Those type of people were not welcomed there,’” she said. “My husband ended up getting very angry and had to walk away.”
Miller-Poole said she conducts photo shoots at the park frequently and was trying to understand if she was banned from the park permanently or just with same-sex couples as clients.
“The man said, ‘If you come back and bring those type of people, you will be removed from the park,’” she said. “I never understood why people make such a big deal about being treated differently until I was actually in the middle of it and witnessed it firsthand. It really bothered me and upset me to witness someone be so cruel.”
Full story: Richmond Register/Ronica Shannon
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THE PLOT THICKENS IN THE CHANNEL 5/INSIGHT/TIME WARNER DISPUTE
After being unable to reach an agreement, Time Warner/Insight yanked WLWT from the cable line-up, but decided to air a station out of Terre Haute in its place. Time Warner did something similar in Louisville and Orlando where they were also unable to reach agreements with local stations owned by Hearst, which owns Channel 5 here. Trouble is, the owners of the stations airing in place of the local ones never gave permission. Via Ad Week:
"We believe Time Warner on an unauthorized basis in an illegal manner misappropriated our signals from three markets. Nexstar intends to pursue all legal and regulatory remedies to cause Time Warner to cease and desist misappropriating signals," a Nexstar spokesperson said in a statement.
However, Time Warner sees this as a legal loophole. "We are acting well within our rights, as we have in the past, in trying to help our subscribers through this," said a TWC spokesperson. 
But the drama doesn't end there. Via John Kiesewetter:
Time Warner has been forced to block afternoon programming on Terre Haute NBC affiliate WTWO-TV — which replaced WLWT-TV Tuesday — because a Cincinnati station has exclusive syndication rights to the shows. Time Warner can’t show “Divorce Court” now (2 p.m.) or “People’s Court” (3 p.m.) from the Terre Haute station because WSTR-TV (Channel 64) has rights to those programs here. Channel 64 complained after seeing the shows on Time Warner yesterday.
If you're keeping score, Time Warner is now blacking out programming on the replacement channel it is (possibly) illegally broadcasting in place of the local station that it is blacked out.
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LOL: RATINGS UP AS TIME WARNER REPLACES WLWT WITH TEST SIGNAL
From the humor guys at Derf Magazine:
Due to a contract battle with WLWT’s parent company, Time Warner Cable dropped Channel 5 from it's cable lineup. Time Warner replaced the Channel 5 signal with a test pattern, which resulted in a significant viewership spike. Neilsen officials say the Channel 5 test pattern popularity has nearly exceeded that of the rotating hot dog machine on a closed circuit TV at a local UDF.
More LOLz: Derf Magazine
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AWWW...
Watch champion filly Zenyatta's baby grow:
Many more awwwdorable photos here: Zenyatta 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- TUESDAY MORNING 5 JUNE

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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SOMEONE SAID THEY SAW A BODY IN THE OHIO RIVER
But no body was recovered after a large search effort on the Covington and Cincinnati sides late Monday night in the area around the Brent Spence Bridge. No search is being conducted this morning. 
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EVANGELIST'S TAX EVASION TRIAL CONTINUES IN COVINGTON
This is the church leader who believes that the end of the world started on May 27: 
“Just by the credit cards alone, the evidence will show you, from 2004 to 2008, the Weinlands had over $500,000 of personal expenses paid for by the church ...,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert McBride said during opening statements on Monday. “That in and of itself isn’t really good business practice, but it isn’t inherently illegal. The crime here is mostly evading income taxes.”
McBride said Weinland failed to pay $244,000 in federal income taxes from 2004 through 2008. 
Cincinnati Enquirer/Jim Hannah 
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SOMEONE HAS A BLOG DEDICATED TO THE TRIAL: 
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COVINGTON PARTNERS COMMUNITY COALITION MEETING TODAY
From the event listing
Please join us for our quarterly coalition meeting on Tuesday June 5, 2012 from 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. at the Center for Great Neighborhoods of Covington. Please note the date change.
We will hear updates on progress made from this past school year and begin making plans for the upcoming school year.
Lunch will be provided by Chef Mark and the Bulldog Cafe! 
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RELATED VIDEO: 
 
PIKE STREET BUILDING TO BE AUCTIONED NEXT TUESDAY
One of the final properties left over from the collapse of Covington-based Market Street Properties hits the auction block next Tuesday. It's at 220 Pike Street: 

The building is appraised at $55,000. Click here for more information. 
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DID YOU MISS MONDAY'S HEADLINES?
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CITY EMPLOYEE PULLED FROM BACKHOE THAT FLIPPED OVER IN DEVOU
A city employee is taken to the hospital after being inside a backhoe on the back of a transport truck that rolled and flipped over in Devou Park. More details and photos from the scene at the link. 
DETAILS AND MORE PHOTOS: The River City News 
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MONDAY AFTERNOON HEADLINES
More charges may be coming against the babysitter accused in the death of a 1-year old Covington boy; Merge all 3 NKY counties' dispatch centers ASAP, says NKY Chamber President; Plus, why a City Commissioner will be eating as many pancakes as possible today. Those stories and more at the link. 
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MONDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Last day for public input on the reconstruction of an important Covington road; NKY majority says no tolls for Brent Spence; Plus, another report from outside the region says Cincinnati is hip and trendy again. Click it.   
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PROGRESS ON THE NEW DEVOU PARK CONCESSIONS/RESTROOM BUILDING
Taken during a Monday afternoon drive-by: 
PANCAKE EATING CONTEST THIS MORNING
To promote its 5K race on Saturday, the Kenton County Public Library is hosting a pancake eating contest this morning at the First Watch on RiverCenter Boulevard. From the Kenton County Public Library
Who wants to watch a Pancake Eating Contest?? Library supporters like U.S. Bank President Dan Groneck, Steve Frank with the City of Covington, Ms. Elizabeth Hardin from the Library and many others will participate in a Pancake Eating Contest on Tuesday, June 5 at 10 a.m. at First Watch in Covington. This is all an effort to support the Library's 5K on Saturday, which is sponsored by First Watch and benefits early childhood literacy. Hope to see you tomorrow! 
Might be a long walk across RiverCenter Boulevard after the
pancake eating contest at First Watch!
Details on the race: Click Here 
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CAMPAIGN COMMERCIAL REENACTED WITH LEGOS
Republican NKY Congressional candidate Alecia Webb-Edgington lost in the primary to Thomas Massie, but her commercial that showed off her legs is still getting attention. And now it's been remade with a Lego lady starring: 
Check out the original here
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QUICKIES
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Auditor to unveil plan to study taxing districts (like NKAPC) Cincinnati Enquirer 
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State Senator: Gov. Beshear should push for cigarette tax in 2013 cn|2 
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A big coup for a Louisville TV station as it lures two veteran sports reporters away from the Courier-Journal (owned by Gannett, which also owns the Cincinnati Enquirer) Courier-Journal 
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Kenton County Democrats recap the state Party convention click here 
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Fundraiser in Campbell Co. for Democratic Congressional candidate Bill Adkins Click Here 
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Kentucky State Penitentiary warden steps down press release 
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DON'T MISS THIS EVENT IN OUTER SPACE TONIGHT!
The "Transit of Venus" is tonight. What is it? The Los Angeles Times: 
Venus will cross paths between the sun and the Earth; we will see a tiny dot floating across the surface of the sun over several hours. 
More details at the link.
The Los Angeles Times 
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Watch the event at NKU: 
The NKU Astronomy/Physics faculty will host a telescope viewing of a very rare astronomical event – the transit of Venus on Tuesday, June 5, from 6 p.m. till sunset (about 9 p.m.). The event is free and open to the members of the NKU community and the general public. So join us on the top level of the Kenton Drive parking garage for a close look at sunspots and the crossing of Venus across the disk of the Sun. For more information, call Chari Ramkumar at 859.572.1527 or Wayne Bresser at 859.572.6678. 
For more, click here 

A NASA ASTRONAUT WILL BE FIRST HUMAN TO PHOTOGRAPH TRANSIT OF VENUS FROM SPACE: 
AN INSIDE LOOK AT COVINGTON'S WUNDERBAR
This new German-themed restaurant on MLK Blvd has some great offerings as detailed in a photo gallery from Metromix
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PRESENTED WITHOUT COMMENT
This vehicle was spotted at the BP in Covington (and before the Covington jokes start, just know that the car had Ohio plates): 
Identifiable objects: hot water heater, exercise machine, freezer on top, area rug, weedeater, baby stroller, back seat contained disposal aluminum cookware, a/c unit... and three people!
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               HAVE A GREAT TUESDAY, COVINGTON!