Mark Keeler said that the drummer for Nazareth died in New Albany after 1995. I said he died before the pub started business in 1992. Let the record show that Darrell Sweet died in 1999, which means that Mark was right and I was wrong. Can any one remember why Nazareth decided to play New Albany in the first place?
Ever since then, I've intended to show the plaque facing the river on the back side of the New Albany Riverfront Amphitheater. Here it is:
But wait -- what's that new plaque above the late Darrell Sweet's?
Hmm, must be the one the Democratic Party presented to her last year: Cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex.
It mirrors the plaque installed on the other side of the stage, facing the audience, and oddly, there still is no mention of the Clark-Floyd Counties Convention and Tourism Bureau's enabling donation:
I'm told that work is underway on an amphitheater use plan for this and coming years, and as we await the details, there remains confusion over the role and composition of New Albany Venues, which was incorporated in 2010 by then-city attorney Shane Gibson, with ex-first lady Michele England as sole principal and an address of the former mayor's office. I'll repeat the questions, in slightly modified form.
Seeing as Mayor England is (gone), does his wife's name remain on the charter of New Albany Venues incorporation, or is there an election/appointment procedure for a succession?
Do the non-profit incorporation rules permit the establishment of a truly non-political, community-infused, pluralistic board or committee, one not entirely dependent on personnel decisions made by future mayors?
Are there any plans for a succession of this sort, or for the establishment of the type of pluralistic, inclusive governing riverfront body?
We have plaques aplenty, and maybe someday there'll be answers, too. Until then, a number.
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