Reporter in Indiana land: "I live in a cool place."
... The murder stories may boost visits to the paper's website and make my editors happy, but my fellow reporters and I are still pleading that we don't forget public-service journalism — keeping watch on elected leaders and shining light on developments that affect people every day.
In my case, recently it's been asking about an issue Knobs residents care deeply about – why wasn't there more oversight by New Albany and Floyd County leaders over where and how LG&E mowed down a wide corridor of mature hardwood trees on a hillside. The utility is spending $22 million to build a substation and connect with Duke's lines to strengthen a weak spot in the grid. Huge poles are now going up in visible spots, reminding one of John Prine's line from the song "Paradise" — "they wrote it all down as the progress of man."
When I asked about how the route for lines was chosen and what alternatives were considered, an LG&E spokeswoman said there are already lots of power lines in that area. In essence, what's the problem? In some states, picturesque views are carefully guarded, so power lines and lighted billboards undergo far more scrutiny over where they're allowed.
Not here. Floyd County's chief planner told me that utilities have a lot of pull. End of story.
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Grace Schneider: "I live in a cool place."
The C-J's Indiana Bureau reporter, Grace Schneider, offers food for thought during a reflection of her time living and working in Southern Indiana. County government really fumbled the LG & E farce, didn't it?
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…except when you need water maples in the alleys trimmed because they intrude upon (and intermittently interrupt) power lines and internet / cable lines - then the utilities can't be bothered.
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