Scott Klink's defining moment for Floyd County
Does Floyd County have enough park land? Can it have enough? Scott Klink is certain of the answers.
He feels fairly sure of yours, as well.
In any event, Klink wants to believe that people believe a county must be more than its storefronts. Business matters but so does getting away from business. Klink asks that his county believe it is high time — the clock ticks — to stand up for a better quality of life.
“It’s not about taxes and revenue all the time,” Klink said. “At some point, it needs to be about what’s good for people.”
The county is considering the future of land on and around its to-be-shuttered annex — its one-time poor house — on Grant Line Road. Options seem to include selling some, most or perhaps all of what Klink said totals 18 acres.
Klink is involved officially as president of the New Albany-Floyd County Parks Board, which operates Sam Peden Community Park right behind the annex. He is involved unofficially as a citizen who, when traveling, marvels at how well some places make the most of nature. They appreciate that more and more pavement is not the only sign of progress. Anyway, Community Park is under attack, by Klink’s reckoning.
New Albany is a state of mind … but whose? Since 2004, we’ve been observing the contemporary scene in this slowly awakening old river town. If it’s true that a pre-digital stopped clock is right twice a day, when will New Albany learn to tell time?
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Moss: "Community Park is under attack, by (Scott) Klink’s reckoning."
Earlier this week, Dale Moss picks up where my recent column, ON THE AVENUES: The usual suspects, and a future held hostage, left off.
"Or as Millea put it, “There are always short-term needs. But selling off long-term value for short-term needs is a mistake.”
ReplyDeletehuh?
Who calls a "park" with non-native, chemically treated grass full of goose shit, and zero trees, all nicely shaded by massive high-tension electrical towers..."peaceful and enlightened"?
There's more life in my urban compost pile than in all of "community park".
There needs to be a community garden area...native hardwoods to clean the pond water...oh god there are soooo many things a Park can be, but a radiation field is not one of them.