Thursday, September 21, 2006

From Bohemia to Babel: Yes, it's a city council Thursday!

I’ve joyfully awakened two mornings running to orchestral music by Dvorak, the Czech composer. Twelve days in Bohemia play just these sorts of tricks, and even though the Czech lands have changed drastically in the century since Dvorak’s death, the country’s pastoral vistas still have a way of conjuring spontaneous Slavonic dances.

Back home in New Albania, ongoing efforts to lift our once vibrant city out of its prolonged period of ennui and institutionalized neglect have cleared another hurdle.

New Albany to start on greenway; City gets $1.2 million state grant for path, by Matt Batcheldor (short shelf life for Courier-Journal links).

Work on New Albany's portion of the $41 million Ohio River Greenway is to begin next month using a $1.2 million state grant the city received yesterday ...

… Mayor James Garner said a contractor for the project will be chosen next week. Garner has spent this week in Indianapolis trying to expedite the grant before a Sept. 30 deadline for federal matching dollars.


Not unexpectedly, there is another side to this story, one that you can read here, as presented by my friend New Alb Annie. Unfortunately, it remains that persistent and disingenuous public choreography on the part of Ms. Bolovschak, our Greenway Commission member, has a tendency to distract (and detract) from her energetic good works. That's too bad. Who is right, and who is wrong? Who gets credit, and who doesn’t?

Who’s on first, anyway?

As we await the verdict, perhaps the cameras will again be rolling, the teleprompter merrily humming, and Professor Erika absently doodling in crayon at tonight’s second of two September city council meetings. A brief preview is offered by the Tribune’s Eric Scott Campbell:

Longevity incentives proposed for nonunion city employees.

How long will it take for 1st District councilman Dan Coffey to say, “It’s the first I’ve heard of it”?

Will 3rd District CM Steve Price’s “no” votes make any sense at all?

What are the odds that the council Democrats’ continuing divisiveness will yet again permit lone Republican Mark Seabrook to float wisely and gently above the fray even as he prepares for an election battle with Floyd County Demo party chairman Randy Stumler, who has consistently refused to discipline the pathologically wayward Gang of Four?

Let’s just hope that the meeting doesn’t keep us past Bistro New Albany’s last call. Progressive pints -- and in a pinch, Dvorak -- can be relied upon to soothe the dissonance engendered by the pettiness of local politics. Posted by Picasa

5 comments:

Ann said...

Probably the most important aspect to the Greenway story is that regardless of how it got done, it did, indeed, get done, and we can all be happy about that. I was quite worried for awhile that the whole thing was going to h*ll.

The New Albanian said...

I concur.

Anonymous said...

So much potential with the project but hampered by the same old folks.

I just got back from Boston. Their city is huge yet has the comfort and feel of a small town. We walked everywhere and enjoyed the sites, sounds, entertainment and food.

There is no reason, other than our current leadership, that our city can't revitalize

Ann said...

A friend made a valid point last evening: most cities try to obtain moneys, but New Albany administration seems bent on letting revenue slip through its fingers via the myriad tax abatements, languid code enforcement resulting in overall property value decline, poor management of assets, etc.

Iamhoosier said...

The few of you who know me, know that I ride a bicycle and will take advantage of the Greenway assuming it is built before I croak.

However, does it strike anyone else that $41 million is a lot of money for 7 miles?