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Showing posts with label parking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parking. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

COMMISSION RECAP: 21 AUGUST PART TWO

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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COVINGTON DISPATCHERS OFFERED EMPLOYMENT IN KENTON CO
It was announced Tuesday night that all twelve Covington dispatchers seeking employment in the new consolidated emergency dispatch center in Kenton County will be offered conditional employment. The conditions include background checks and drug screenings. The newly named director of the center, Ed Butler, told The River City News after the meeting that while the salaries are lower than what Covington offered, the pay will be comparable due to the facts that there will be no city taxes and no union dues deducted from the paychecks.
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The city commission unanimously approved declaring property belonging to the Covington dispatch center as surplus property, including its top-of-the-line CAD (computer-aided dispatch) system. The new county center, which expects to take over 911 emergency and police dispatch services for the City of Covington on or around September 30, will use the CAD and current county dispatchers will being training on it the week of September 17 with the goal of implementing it on September 25.
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The new dispatch center received 85 applications for employment, including twelve from Covington (there are fifteen dispatchers employed in Covington) and expected to have five additional spots to fill once the Covington dispatchers join the county center.
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Covington dispatchers are used to being represented by a union and Butler said that he has no concern that the new employees will try to form a new one in the county.
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POLICE CHIEF SPELLS OUT SAVINGS PLAN
Covington Police Chief Spike Jones presented to the City Commission Tuesday night his plans for cutting $500,000 from the police department's budget. "We are a back to basics police department now," Jones said. "You call the police, we respond and provide good customer service." Part of the plan, instigated by a departmental review conducted by Cincinnati-based consulting firm Management Partners, includes the eventual elimination of the rank of captain within the department. That process will happen gradually, though the commission heard a first reading of an ordinance that would reduce the number of captains from five to four in the coming weeks. 
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The administrative restructuring was presented as a chart that place the chief at the top with an executive officer directly below him with three captains overseeing the day-to-day operations at Twentieth & Madison with one in charge of patrol and SWAT, another in charge of administration, and another in charge of criminal investigations. "By working through attritions and engaging in a "hiring frost" it was possible to preserve our current staff without having to layoff junior staff members," Jones's presentation said. "This attrition strategy also moved us closer to the command structure model proposed by Management Partners."
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Following the reduction of officers through retirements and resignations over the past two months, the department was able to retain seventy-four sworn officers on the streets, the number on the force at the beginning of the process assigned to patrol shifts. Meanwhile, officers previously assigned to the former narcotics unit and community relations unit were combined to create a tactical unit called the D-Team as recommended by Management Partners.
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The total savings from the plan come from $150,000 saved from leaving positions open, $120,000 saved through the changes to the captain position, $100,000 from changes to the sergeant position, and $180,000 from changes to specialist positions. Removing the $150,000 lost when Covington Independent Public Schools moved to using the Kenton County Sheriff's Office as school resource officers instead of the Covington Police, the final total arrives at the hoped-for half million in savings. 
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REPORTER OBJECTS TO LATE AGENDA ITEM ABOUT FIRE DEPT CUTS
"The commission is not authorized to consider this." A reporter from the Cincinnati Enquirer took exception to an item on Tuesday night's city commission agenda and took his case to the podium. One commissioner threatened to have him removed from the meeting. What went down, and what the agenda item was about, at the link.
Full story: The River City News 
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COMMISSION VOTES TO KEEP PROPERTY TAXES AT SAME LEVEL
Property taxes collected by the City of Covington will remain at the same 0.2995 rate that has been for at least the past five years, keeping the city around the middle of the pack in relation to other NKY cities and their property tax rates. Commissioner Steve Casper explained that there was discussion to take what is known as the compensating rate, as the Covington School Board likely will, but it was never on the table to take a full 4% increase. 
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CITY TAKES OWNERSHIP OF CITY CENTER PARKING GARAGE
The Commonwealth of Kentucky gave Covington a free parking garage which the City Commission unanimously accepted. The City Center parking garage is the one adjacent to City Hall between 7th & Pike Streets along Scott Boulevard. City Manager Larry Klein explained that the garage was built and owned by the Commonwealth but was declared surplus property. "This is a great economic development tool to have a parking garage Downtown," Klein said. "We feel very fortunate to link that garage to make it a permanent attachment to City Hall, and as an economic development tool."
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RIVERCENTER GARAGE TO GET A PAINT JOB
Another garage owned by the City of Covington will be freshened up thanks to a $153,931 contract awarded to Covington-based Flannery Painting. City Engineer Tom Logan expects the paint job to take approximately forty-five days.
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UPPER FLOOR RESIDENTIAL REHAB FUNDS SPOKEN FOR
It was announced Tuesday that one of the incentives to lure more development Downtown have been entirely claimed by four applicants. The City of Covington has been offering $20,000 matching grants toward the development of upper floors of Downtown buildings so that more market-rate housing would be available. The city commission adopted the guidelines for furnishing those funds, though Commissioner Steve Casper announced himself as "present, not voting" because his landlords are among the applicants that promise thirteen new apartments. 
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$100,000 INVESTMENT YIELDS $1.8 MILLION RETURN FOR CITY
The city commission voted to extend its working agreement with the National Development Council, in the amount of $60,000 payable from CDBG funds. The NDC oversees the Grow America Fund in which the City invested $100,000 and which, according to assistant community development director Rebecca Volpe, has yielded a $1.8 million return. Volpe explained that those funds are used to help Covington-based small businesses in their expansion efforts. "With everything we're trying to do in terms of economic development, we need to leverage these funds even more," Mayor Chuck Scheper said.
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Volpe, meanwhile, confirmed that she has accepted a new position with Northern Kentucky University as the director of the Small Business Development Center and will be leaving the City. Her final city commission meeting appearance will be September 4 and will mark the exit of the top two managers of Covington's community development department this summer. Director Jackson Kinney resigned June 28. 
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MORE TRAFFIC TROUBLE COMING TO SOUTH COVINGTON
In addition to the massive effort at expanding Taylor Mill Road and Old Taylor Mill Road, the city commission approved work to begin on nearby Wayman Branch. Pipes underneath the road are separating causing damage to it. In fact, the damage is so bad, that the road would have been shut down were it not for the hard work of the city's road crews. "This road would have had to be shut down but road crews were able to widen it and keep traffic moving," said engineer Tom Logan. The work of replacing a culvert and restoring the roadway will be performed by Straight Edge Construction in a contract worth $126,305. Sanitation District 1 will reimburse the city half that cost.
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OTHER NOTES
-Bryce Rhoades was named assistant city solicitor, replacing Alex Mattingly who is now city administrator in Elsmere. Rhoades, a resident of Covington, was most recently a law clerk at the Kentucky Supreme Court.
-Constance Norman resigned from the police department for personal reasons
-A contract was awarded to Joseph Decosimo and Company, LLC for the city's auditing services

Friday, July 13, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- FRIDAY MORNING 13 JULY

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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NO SUCH THING AS FREE PARKING IN AN URBAN DOWNTOWN
From a piece titled Why an urban Downtown and lots of free parking spots are mutually exclusive published in Las Vegas Weekly:
Donald Shoup, UCLA economist and genius of all things parking, notes that there’s no such thing as “free parking.” Parking takes up valuable real estate, and mandating parking increases the cost of development, just as mandating a hot tub in every condo would push up the cost of housing. The city sharply curtailed with parking requirements for new buildings Downtown. Let’s keep it that way.
City parking meters are not priced according to any rational scheme. In a free market, price is the interplay of supply and demand. The price of the parking meters, by contrast, is arbitrary, like the price of bread in the old Soviet Union. Ideally, higher demand spots would fetch higher prices, and vice versa, and with rational pricing all the spots on a block would be taken except for one or at most two, which allows for the circulation that business owners desire.
Because the meters aren’t rationally priced, people cruise around looking for underpriced meter spots, which creates traffic.
Full story: Las Vegas Weekly
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RISING COST OF HEALTH CARE, PENSIONS CONTINUE TO HIT CITIES
Covington has been dealing with this issue and three California cities have gone bankrupt over it (and other issues)in the past two weeks, but larger cities like Philadelphia are struggling, too:
For the $3.589 billion budget for the 2013 fiscal year, employee benefits have jumped to $1.116 billion – $629 million for pensions and $487 million for other benefits.
While the city budget grew by only 16.15 percent over the last decade, employee benefits obligations grew by more than 111 percent. This trend is likely to continue.
Full story: The Atlantic Cities
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DON'T MISS THURSDAY'S NEWS
Guilty plea in case that involved dismembered legs found on Hands Pike; Killer fakes his death in KY only to show up on his own YouTube channel; Plans are announced to rebuild playground destroyed by fire; Plus, why we're not supposed to call Cincinnati "The Queen City" anymore. Click it.
The RC News: Thursday Evening Round-Up |
QUICKIES
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Pregnant woman, unborn child die after crash on I-471 Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Fatal crash on I-75 Thursday also, this time near Walton Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Governor Beshear tells federal government that he is creating the health care exchange WBKO 
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Beshear uses Governor's Mansion to raise funds for daughter-in-law's horse competition Herald-Leader 
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MORE SUCCESS NOTED AT COVINGTON SHELTER (AND A REQUEST)
From the Emergency Shelter of NKY:

We have a guest who has secured an apartment in Covington and will move in the 3rd of the month. He is in need of these basic items: twin or double bed, chest of drawers, table/chairs, end tables and a sitting chair. If you have these items to donate, please email me at emergencyshelter@yahoo.com I am able to pick up after August 3rd if items are not too large. 
Our guest, Ed that needed the bike for work hopped on the bus early this morning with his bike in tow for his orientation day at his new job. Thanks for all of you who responded and a big thank you to the Powers family who donated a bike and lock to Ed.
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"HUGE NEWS" FOR DEVOU PARK FROM THE GUYS ON THE TRAILS
From the Devou Park Trails:
Rotary Grove Lane has been closed off to motorized use. This is huge for Devou. It gives yet another passage way for self propelled activities. The asphalt still remains, yet the cars are gone. Rotary grove lane dissects the Lewisburg Trail. First road crossing coming down. Rotary lane can now act as another motor-less way to access the top of the park. We are fired up!!
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DANIEL BOONE'S DESCENDANTS HELP PROMOTE BOONE'S TRAIL IN KY
From the Commonwealth of Kentucky:
Agencies of Kentucky’s Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet are applauding an effort by the national Boone Society to develop and promote the historic Boone Trace through eastern Kentucky. This famous road, which followed trails used by Native Americans and buffaloes, was used by thousands of settlers traveling to Kentucky and beyond, launching the westward movement.
Properly developed, marked and promoted, the trace could become an economic engine stimulating tourism in the region, proponents say.
The Boone Society, a national organization of Boone family descendants, interested genealogists and historians, is working to identify, restore and preserve the trail blazed in 1775 by Daniel Boone, who was then an agent of the Transylvania Company. Known as the Boone Trace, the 117 mile trail entered Kentucky at Cumberland Gap near Middlesboro, crossed the Cumberland River at Pineville, ran northwest past London, and ended at Fort Boonesborough near Richmond.

Upon further progress in the Boone Society’s development efforts, the Kentucky Department of Travel and Tourism and the Kentucky Department of Parks will assist the Boone Society with promotion of the Boone Trace and its historical significance.
There are four state parks and one national park within the Boone Trace corridor: the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, Pine Mountain State Resort Park, Dr. Thomas Walker State Historic Site, Levi Jackson State Park, and Fort Boonesborough State Park. 
In 1915, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) placed 12 stone markers along the trail to highlight its historical significance. These and other historical markers placed along the route since that time will be the focus of an effort by the Boone Society to list the Boone Trace on the National Register of Historic Places.
For more info, click here.
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COVINGTON PARTNERS GOF OUTING SET FOR MONDAY
The Covington Partners 3rd Annual Golf Outing at Traditions Golf Club is Monday, July 16. There is still time to register your foursome for a fun filled day of great golf at a world class course. Contact Margo Willman at (859) 392-3172 or margo.willman@covington.kyschools.us to reserve your space today!


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HOW THE FUTURE WAS VIEWED ALL THE WAY BACK IN... 1979
Some of the predictions are pretty spot-on:

  • Flat screen TV. No longer a bulky box, TV screens have shrunk to a thickness of less than five centimeters.  
  • Mail slot. By 1990, most mail will be sent in electronic form. (The year was a little off, but still...)
  • Domestic robot rolls in with drinks. (OK, so we're all still waiting on that one...)
Check out the predictions with a terrific cartoon at the link.
BoingBoing 

Monday, June 25, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- MONDAY EVENING 25 JUNE

THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
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by Michael Monks 
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INTERIM POLICE CHIEF ON PLAYGROUND FIRE: "ABSOLUTELY DISGUSTING"
The fire that mostly destroyed the playground at Sixth District Elementary School in Austinburg early Sunday morning is being investigated as suspicious according to Covington Police. No arrests have been made but investigators are hopeful that surveillance video from the school that shows activity before and during the fire will help lead to suspects. "Our investigators are meeting with area residents and potential witnesses to put together facts surrounding this event," said interim Covington Police Chief Spike Jones, who attended first through third grades at Sixth District in the 1970s. "It's absolutely horrible that anyone would torch a child's playground, especially at an elementary school. It's absolutely disgusting."
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Meantime...
Representatives from the Center for Great Neighborhoods which primarily built the park in 1999, Gateway Technical & Community College, Keep Covington Beautiful, and Janice Wilkerson of Covington Independent Public Schools met this afternoon to assess the situation. Daneille Eulitt of Keep Covington Beautiful tells The River City News: 
1.The playground site is currently an official crime scene. We are waiting to hear from the police and fire departments, as well as the insurance company, to see if and when we will be able to begin the clean-up. As of right now, plans for renovation and the swing set installation are stalled until we hear further information from them, which may take several weeks.
2. We have a preliminary estimate of the cost of rebuilding the structure at $100,000, mainly for materials. Of course, we will be seeking donations and volunteers, and we are working on some fundraising efforts now.3. We plan to keep our initial “build” date of July 21st, however, in lieu of any building, installing or renovation, we will focus instead on hosting a community involvement event at Sixth District. We also plan to start the beautification project with some planting and initial landscaping around the front and back entrances of the school building itself.
4. At the event we will have a volunteer sign-up, encouraging community members to donate their time and expertise in rebuilding the playground. We will also be asking the community to provide their input and ideas for designs for a blacktop mural as well as components they would like to see as part of the new playground structure. 
To donate or help with repairs please contact : Heather Abbott Student Affairs Specialist Urban Center of Gateway Community Technical College 525 Scott Boulevard Covington, KY 41011Office: (859) 815-7634
heather.abbott@kctcs.edu
To read the original report and to see more photos of the damage, click the link below. 
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POSSIBLY SUSPICIOUS FIRE IN OLD SEMINARY SQUARE
A dumpster used for construction debris during the renovation of a row house at the corner of Russell & Robbins Streets caught fire Saturday afternoon. The location was also the site of a fatal fire in 2009 that nearly destroyed the four connected row houses, nearly all of which have now been renovated. A neighbor who witnessed Saturday afternoon's fire tells The River City News, "Flames were shooting and the smoke was very thick for a couple of hours. The Covington Fire Department had two big trucks and they got it under control. They did a good job protecting property and cars in the vicinity. Kudos to them for averting a terrible fire in our neighborhood."
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Interim Chief Jones says the police department is also investigating the dumpster fire as suspicious. "They were lookinh into that to see if there are connections (to the Sixth District playground fire)," Jones said. "We'll look at any possible connections and right now we're looking at all aspects on that one."

COVINGTON CHANGES PARKING RULES FOR MAINSTRASSE LOTS
There will soon be a limit on how long drivers can park in the Fifth Street parking lot and the 501 Main Street parking lot. From a City of Covington press release: 
In an effort to free up these lots for the residents, businesses, and the visitors to Mainstrasse Village - and keep commuters that were using the lot as a Park and Ride out of the lot - we had AMPCO install "3 Hour Parking, M-F 8 AM to 5 PM" signs. AMPCO has made parking passes that will be available to the residents, businesses, and their employees that will be free of charge. With the pass, vehicles will be able to park longer than 3 hours without being ticketed. These passes will be distributed free of charge.

The passes are available in the AMPCO office that is located in the Midtown Garage (corner of 5th and Scott, directly across from the Library). Those wishing to obtain a pass will need to show Ampco a pay stub showing employment at a business, or a piece of mail, drivers license, or something similar showing proof of residency to receive their pass. AMPCO will be issuing warning tickets initially, explaining the process for those that did not get the notification. 
If anyone has questions, please call Mike Yeager, Covington Engineering Division, at 292-2112 or Ron Traweek with AMPCO at 431-7049.

MEANWHILE...
The City of Covington is writing more parking tickets than ever before
From the Cincinnati Enquirer: 
Vigilant meter monitors, working for Ampco System Parking, have been writing significantly more parking tickets in recent months than city police wrote in the past. The aggressive enforcement will pour nearly $387,000 into city accounts, 52 percent more money than two years ago when Covington police – often cadets – were primarily responsible for parking enforcement.
In addition to a boost to city coffers, city leaders hope the boost in ticket-writing will make it easier to find parking in Covington and lead to more people visiting Covington businesses. 
Full story: Cincinnati Enquirer/Mike Rutledge 
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MONDAY MORNING'S NEWS
Don't miss this morning's news! Should school board members be tested for qualifications? KY's education commissioner thinks so; Work on a business improvement district for Downtown Covington begins in earnest in the coming days; Plus, how you can help rebuild Sixth District's playground. Click it.
The RC News: Monday Morning Round-Up 
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CITY COMMISSIONER TO MISS IMPORTANT COVINGTON BUDGET VOTE
City Commissioner Steve Frank will not be present at either of this week's important meetings regarding the City of Covington's finances. Frank writes at Facebook: 
All, unfortunately I will be out of town beginning this morning on business and may not be able to be back until Friday. I have made every city meeting both public and executive and tried to make as many neighborhood and city events as possible given the fact that I also have a 60 hour work week in my other profession. That means I will miss Tuesday Night's presentation from Management partners along with Chuck Scheper's State of the City Speech and Thursday's final vote on the budget. That said I have read the Management partner's report cover to cover, several times and participated in several all day events that helped shape its content. As per the budget. I am in full support and have seen the final numbers. Its a tough budget but one that is required if we want to get Covington back on a sustainable path to economic recovery. The budget vote should carry without my presence. Even given that, the only way I would miss these events is if it was absolutely required by my professional business to be away. 
Those meetings are Tuesday and Thursday. Tuesday night, Mayor Scheper and the city commission will present the 2012-13 budget to the public at 6:00PM inside the Madison Event Center. On Thursday night at 6:00PM inside City Hall, the commission will vote on the budget. The River City News will have full, in-depth coverage both nights.
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PENSION COSTS CONTINUE TO DOG CITY BUDGETS
The rising cost of public pensions weigh heavily on municipal and state finances but a new rule will bring to light the financial obligations that could have been hidden previously: 
The new rules are the result of more than five years of work by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board on one of the most contentious topics the agency has ever tackled. The current rules have been criticized for making pensions look more affordable than they really are and creating incentives for governments to take undue risks with taxpayer money.
(snip)
Mr. Attmore declined to predict which states and cities would bear the brunt of the board’s rule changes, but said that, in general, it would be those that had failed, year after year, to set aside as much money as their actuaries instructed. Such plans include those operated by Illinois, New Jersey and Kentucky. 
Full story: The New York Times 
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SEE ALSO: Despite many reforms, big problems persist in most states with public pensions The Economist 
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HOW MUCH DO OUR STATE LEGISLATORS MAKE?
The Courier-Journal created a list of salaries and total 2011 compensation received by members of the Kentucky House of Representatives and the State Senate and shows House Speaker Greg Stumbo earning the most with a salary of $47,114 and total compensation of $94,183. 
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Local legislators: 

Rep. Arnold Simpson $27,480 in salary, $63,976 in total compensaion
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Rep. Dennis Keene $29,906 in salary, $71,000 in total compensation

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Rep. Tom Kerr $16,752 in salary, $47,083 in total compensation

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Sen. Jack Westwood $22,189 in salary, $58,180 in total compensation

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Sen. Damon Thayer $19,240 in salary, $47,901 in total compensation

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The full list, as well as explanations on how total compensation is calculated, is at the link. 

Courier-Journal 
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GOV BESHEAR SIGNS BILL CRACKING DOWN ON METAL THEFT
From a press release:
Metal recyclers in Kentucky will soon be required to register and keep records of their purchases under legislation sponsored by Rep. Tanya Pullin
(D – South Shore), which becomes law July 12.
During a ceremonial signing of House Bill 390 today at the Louisville Metro Police Department’s Third Division, Gov. Steve Beshear said the bill will ensure that recyclers are not inadvertently receiving stolen metal such as copper, brass, aluminum, bronze, lead or zinc.
“What Rep. Pullin has put into place is a statute that will give our Kentucky State Police the ability to track not only sellers of stolen metals, but those who knowingly purchase those metals, many times after Kentuckians have been victimized by the vandalizing of home and business air conditioning units or other sources of these metals,” said Gov. Beshear. “This will make it much more difficult for metal thieves to operate in the Commonwealth.”
HB 390 requires a registry for second metal recyclers, which will be administered by the Office of Occupations and Professions (O&P) in the Public Protection Cabinet. That registry will require applicants to pay the Kentucky State Police for conducting background checks. The legislation also limits payments for restricted metals to be done by check or electronic bank transfer rather than cash. It also requires the registry to keep records of restricted metal purchases such as manhole covers, guardrails, traffic signs, etc., and makes those records available to law enforcement at all times. Additionally, HB 390 recommends the creation of a Recyclable Metals Theft Prevention Working Group.
Once the regulations have been finalized, second metals recyclers will be required to submit to a name-based background check and receive a certificate of registration from O&P within 60 days of the effective date of the regulations.
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QUICKIES
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Police work to combat growing heroin epidemic in NKY Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Triple digit weather coming to Kentucky this week Herald-Leader 
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Kentucky ranks tenth in injury related deaths State-Journal 
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Immigration ruling at US Supreme Court could halt Kentucky legislation WFPL 
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US lawmakers reworked their own portfolios as economy was collapsing in 2008 Washington Post 
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NKU to study human trafficking in region Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Dole recalls salads sold at Kroger and Walmart in Kentucky, other states Business Courier 
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BUZZKILL: 45-50 LBS OF MARIJUANA SEIZED IN KENTUCKY
A lot of weed is seized after a traffic stop on I-75 in Whitley County. From the Kentucky State Police: 
During the stop officer Douglas learned 58 yr old Carl R. Bradshaw of Cincinnati Ohio was operating a 2003 Chevy Z-71 Tahoe at a high rate of speed and in a careless manner. While on the stop, Douglas smelled an odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle and asked the driver to step from the vehicle at which time consent to search was obtained.
Located in the rear passenger compartment of the vehicle was a suitcase and duffle bag containing approximately 45-50 lbs of marijuana. Bradshaw was arrested without incident and lodged in the Whitley Co Detention Center.
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CINCINNATI (AND COVINGTON) GET SHOUT-OUT IN LARGE NEWSPAPER
The swath of positive national media attention bestowed upon Cincinnati lately continues with a nice profile in the Chicago Tribune about the World Choir Games: 
Cincinnati is a city of neighborhoods, and two on the must-see list include Over-the-Rhine, an uber-chic area near downtown with a distinct Old World vibe. It's one of the most intact historically significant collections of architecture in the nation, comparable to New Orleans and Savannah, Ga.
In this rapidly gentrifying neighborhood, you'll find specialty shops, boutiques and several restaurants named among the best in town by Cincinnati magazine. 
Covington and Newport get nice mentions, too: 
When it's time to dine, the German heritage is in evidence across the Ohio River in places such as the MainStrasse Village area in Covington, Ky. Or walk across the "Purple People Bridge" to Newport, Ky., where the Hofbrauhaus is modeled after the original in Munich. While there, save time for the nearby Newport Aquarium, with its long underwater tunnels where sharks glide above you, and Mighty Mike, the biggest gator in the U.S. outside of Florida.
Full story: Chicago Tribune 
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When the World Choir Games kick off next month, three events will be held in Covington, with one each at Devou Park, Mainstrasse Village, and the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption.
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CAN YOU HELP THE HOLMES HIGH SCHOOL BAND?
From the Holmes Band: 
Alumni and supporters of the Holmes Band we need your help!!! We are quickly approaching band camp season and we are looking for some items to help our students. If you are able to donate any of the following we would greatly appreciate it: a case of bottled water, granola bars, small bags of chips. If you are able to help us out please let us know!!!!! Thanks so much in advance and as always "Once a Bulldog .... Always a Bulldog"

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

NEWS ROUND-UP -- TUESDAY EVENING 15 MAY

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THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
by Michael Monks 
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MAINSTRASSES PREPARES FOR MAIFEST
The annual Maifest celebration is this weekend in Covington's Mainstrasse Village and not only will the tens of thousands of visitors be treated to several new businesses but also a newly redesigned parking lot. Take a look: 
The sign on Sixth Street
German flags are up on Main Street
Hanging the decorative lights
New landscaping at Fifth Street parking lot
A much better entry to Mainstrasse from this
important Covington gateway
Newly paved
Looks like a new sign is going up
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SELLING COVINGTON: WE'RE ALL AMBASSADORS NOW
Are we on the verge of an entrepreneurial renaissance in Covington? The City's ambitious incentives program is explained in new signage adorning many windows of vacant buildings. But if C plus V is really to equal G, it will take all of our help. Lots of photos and a brief editorial at the link. 
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COULD OVER-THE-RHINE BE A ROADMAP FOR COVINGTON REDEVELOPMENT?
At Tuesday morning's Eggs N Issues breakfast hosted by the NKY Chamber of Commerce, the Catalytic Development Fund's Jeanne Schroer and Gateway College President Ed Hughes talked up the revitalization of the urban core: 
“What has been accomplished there is a good model for us,” said Jeanne Schroer, executive director of the Catalytic Development Funding Corp. of Northern Kentucky, which has raised $10 million to jump-start investment in the region’s river cities.
“We in Northern Kentucky showed Cincinnati what can be done on the riverfront: we were the pioneers. And now what they’ve done in their urban neighborhood of Over-the-Rhine is a good example of what can be accomplished in a challenging environment,” she said. 
Cincinnati Enquirer/Amanda Van Benschoten  
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PORTION OF US 25 NAMED FOR FALLEN SOLDIER, HOLMES GRAD
Jason Bishop was 31 when he was killed in 2006 in Iraq: 
A sign reading SFC Jason Bishop Memorial Highway was unveiled Friday, May 11 in a ceremony featuring Bishop’s family and state and local officials. The memorial highway stretches from the intersection of KY 22 to the intersection KY 467 along U.S. 25 Dry Ridge Bypass in Grant County.
Kentucky Post 
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HOLMES BASKETBALL COACH TELLS HIS SURVIVOR TALE
Jason Booher, varsity boys basketball head coach at Holmes High School, was 13-years old when he survived the fateful Carrollton bus crash that killed twenty-seven people in 1988. He told his story to students Monday. One report was linked to this morning and here is the report from WKRC:



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NEW BAKERY/CAFE OPENS ON PIKE STREET
Welcome the Tinney family from Falmouth who just opened Bread & Spice on Pike Street which will be a bakery, and breakfast & lunch spot with an emphasis on vegetarian dining. Bread & Spice is located in the former AJ Creations space. How a trip to Baltimore inspired Covington's newest business owner to go for it and also inspired the new bakery/restaurant's name. Welcome to town, Bread & Spice. Story at the link. 
The RC News: Bread & Spice Opens On Pike Street 
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QUICKIES
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SEN. MCCONNELL SUPPORTS COVINGTON'S DESIRED CHANGES FOR BRENT SPENCE BRIDGE PROJECT:
Commissioner Steve Frank reports: "More good news on the Brent Spence Bridge front. We now have Senator Mitch McConnell in favor of Covington's planned revisions to plan I ! We need you to do your part before May 25!"
McConnell joins Sen. Rand Paul, neighboring cities, and civic organizations in support of Covington's efforts as detailed in an earlier report at the link. 
Desired Changes for Bridge Backed by Senator, Neighboring Cities 
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MEANWHILE, SEN. RAND PAUL IS BEING CRITICIZED FOR SAYING THAT PRESIDENT OBAMA'S POSITION ON MARRIAGE "COULDN'T GET ANY GAYER":
R. Clarke Cooper, executive director of the Log Cabin Republicans, a national GOP group that advocates equality for gays and lesbians, also denounced Paul’s remarks.
“Senator Paul’s comments were inappropriate and immature,” Cooper said in a statement. “The issue of marriage equality and the fundamental dignity due LGBT Americans under our law merits serious, respectful debate.” 
Courier-Journal/James R. Carroll  
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Judge orders suspects held in anti-gay hate crime in Kentucky WKYT 
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Successful start for Concourse A at CVG Cincinnati Enquirer 
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Kentucky has high percentage of government jobs Business First 
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Attorney General Jack Conway announces $6 million settlement with Merck press release 
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Earlier a former UK basketball player was charged with having sex with minors, now a former UK football player is charged with a DUI WLEX 
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Citilogic grows, adds partner Soapbox Cincinnati 
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Student designed tech solutions garner more university attention Soapbox Cincinnati 
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Flu season is almost over, no new cases to report in NKY NKY Health Dept 
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Ford Escape to pace Kentucky Speedway NASCAR race Business First 
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Secretary of State Allison Lundergan Grimes urges voters to prepare for primary election press release 
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FROM THE WELCOME HOUSE:
Do you like to cook, we could use your skills at our shelter! We currently have 16 adults and 10 kids, please contact Donna Hooper at 859-431-8717 if you're interested. 
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TUESDAY MORNING'S HEADLINES
The report on how to run Covington City Hall more effectively is now in the hands of the City Commission; Plus, a Newport restaurant finds money hidden inside that dates back to the mob days. Those stories and much more at the link!
The RC News: Tuesday Morning Round-Up 
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COVINGTON SHOP OWNER: HOW TO BUY A SUIT AND LOOK GOOD IN IT
Jerod Theobald, owner of flow - a shop for men on Scott Boulevard writes: 
Black is nice, but a solid navy, two-button suit is a better option. To complete the classic look, pair the navy suit with a white or light blue dress shirt. Not sure about fabric? Stick with mid-weight 100% wool. It’s heavy enough to keep you warm in the cooler months but light enough to keep you comfortable as temperatures begin to climb.
More tips from Jerod at the link. 
Cincinnati Profile  
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WHY WAS 300LBS OF ELM TREE BARK STOLEN IN KENTUCKY?
Because apparently it can be used in herbal remedies: 
The Lewis County Sheriff's Office said more than 300 pounds of elm bark was taken from private property, bark that can sell for up to $300 a pound, CBS affiliate WKYT reports. 
CBS                

Thursday, May 3, 2012

CENTER CITY ACTION PLAN: PART ONE OF THREE

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THE RIVER CITY NEWS MORE COVINGTON NEWS THAN ANY OTHER SOURCE
by Michael Monks 
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The so-called "plan of plans" to lead Covington's urban core back down a path of revitalization has arrived at City Hall and The River City News has scored a copy just before its expected online release to the public. The Covington Center City Action Plan (CCCAP) was financed by a 2010 grant awarded to the city in 2010 by the US Department of Housing & Urban Development (42 cities nationwide were awarded the Community Challenge Planning Grant). The city selected Denver-based Progressive Urban Management Associates to lead the plan's development and over the past eight months PUMA has delved into the challenges Covington faces and how best to ignite a lightning bolt of development activity in the urban core. 
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The plan focuses on three key initiatives: a strong economy, an inviting public realm, and strong neighborhoods. In this first of three reports, the focus will be on the first part, a strong economy. The other two elements will be detailed in follow-up reports Thursday. 
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COVINGTON HAS A STRONG BASE FROM WHICH TO GROW
Throughout the planning process it was clear that Covington is not a blank canvas; in fact, the PUMA team built its plan around three strong areas in the city that could serve as a catalyst for development around them and elsewhere: Mainstrasse, the riverfront, and several blocks along the Madison Avenue corridor (which includes parts of Scott Boulevard and the Gateway College Urban Campus for the purposes of the report). PUMA notes that the NKY Convention Center sees 300,000 annual visitors, 400,000 people visit Mainstrasse each year, and the Covington branch of the Kenton County Library welcomes 390,000 people annually.  
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While the CCCAP focuses first on those three areas there are two other potential areas of development in the near future. PUMA envisions a cultural campus around the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption and Covington Latin School where Madison Avenue meets Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard in a newly redesigned intersection. To the west on MLK Boulevard is another area where the new Saint Elizabeth Hospital has opened and where the former Jillian's site in the old Bavarian Brewery building sits vacant. The redesigned Brent Spence Bridge plans could make MLK Boulevard one of the prime gateways into the city.
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ATTRACTING JOBS
The plan calls on the city to build upon the center city's niche of innovation and incubation through providing incentives, business support and technical assistance to new 
and existing businesses. Those steps could include permit and regulatory help, market information, maintaining an inventory of available commercial space, business planning, and merchandising. Incentives could include providing working capital for innovative and creative business concepts, low/no interest loans and grants, funding for tenant finish, working with landlords to develop contract or lease relief for businesses that generate a certain kind or number of jobs and provide a desirable service or product, and Providing incentives for light manufacturing, creative pursuits and residential uses on upper floors of currently underutilized buildings in Center City. 
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PUMA suggests that there be a physical location in which all of this information is readily available.
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MARKETING COVINGTON
The CCCAP suggests marketing Center City as a center of innovation to University students throughout the region including Gateway Community and Technical College, University of Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky University and to strive to attract and keep young talent in Covington by promoting its quality of life, amenities and affordable real estate.  The plan recommends that the city work with hotels to ensure that literature and brochure in lobbies and rooms let visitors know that they are not just in Greater Cincinnati, but specifically in Covington. The plan suggests the creation of a map identifying all that is offered within the center city. 
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THIS STORY CONTINUES BELOW, JUST CLICK THE LINK!
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