Showing posts with label August. Show all posts
Showing posts with label August. Show all posts

Monday, September 02, 2019

Mirin's departure leads the August Top Ten at NA Confidential.

Many obituary readers, too few patrons. Weird.

Thanks for reading NA Confidential, where we enjoy reconnoitering the neglected periphery for uniquely local perspectives on life in New Albany. Otherwise your only choice would be the Jeffersonville News and Evangelbune, and that's a fate almost as unrewarding as light beer.

Year in and year out, business is slower in August, so we'll restrict the survey to the top ten alone in ascending order, sans honorable mentions.

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736

To park or not to park? Conflicting signage is the question.



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758

Remembering Matt Brewer, bidding Williams Plumbing an affectionate farewell and beseeching City Hall to give a damn about public safety.


In fact these commercial vehicles have blocked sight lines at this corner since 1987, when Williams Plumbing bought the building and converted it to what amounts to an industrial use, which in practice has meant neglecting it consistently into a neighborhood eyesore.

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803

ON THE AVENUES: The whys and wherefores can drive a man to drink; our lives just ARE, and that's that.


Birthdays get piled into desk drawers alongside rusty paper clips, obsolete business cards and bits of senseless plastic that somehow have evaded landing in the ocean. It would be pleasant bonus if the annual birthday observance yielded something genuinely revelatory; to paraphrase Michael McDonald, we'd trade it all right now for just one minute of real insight.

Beats me. I'm just a bozo on this bus, and perfectly content to watch from one side of the bar or the other for so long as Dear Leader rises from bed to flip the switch that makes the sun rise each morning, because the open air museum never looks more fetching than by dawn's early light.

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854

Learning nothing from the the Ohio River Bridges Project, INDOT bureaucrats refuse to conduct a formal economic impact study in the run up to Sherman Minton project work.


Well then, screw the state's project team. Join me in wondering how many of them have any experience owning indie businesses. As with Gahan's crack team of paper-shufflers, assuredly none do.

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966

The Fork (and Cheese) in the Road has not been seen because Jeff Gahan is holding it hostage until someone gives him more campaign finance gravy.


Many people have asked what became of Fork in the Road, the sculpture removed by Gahan's mercenary thugs in the run-up to unnecessary Market Street beautification.

The city has not commented on the whereabouts of the Fork (and cheese) in the Road. What we'll get instead of a unique, iconic locally produced sculpture is an HWC IKEA ceremonial gate that looks like every other such Disney-fried atrocity in every other place where money-grubbing politicians farm art to aesthetic assassins -- like HWC.

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1,033

Gahan commits violence against our most vulnerable because our most beautiful can't get enough of "sanitary conditions."


"We were out of town when Mayor Gahan lied to and then destroyed a community of homeless people here in New Albany. His personal actions and the usual lack of substantive response from other Democratic officials are deplorable but not at all surprising given their consistent track records of subsidizing the wealthy while seeking to limit or penalize nearly everyone else."

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1,066

Hull & High Water announcement: "On top of our seafood menu, we have now decided to launch a full Southern BBQ program."


"We have decided to change a few things here at Hull to add a more diverse dining experience with added catering options as well. You could only keep me away from southern cuisine for so long. On top of our seafood menu, we have now decided to launch a full Southern BBQ program. We miss the likes of Feast BBQ and Shawn's Southern BBQ downtown and would like to fill that hole with much due respect."

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1,088

Downtown taco turmoil: Sinaloa and El Rico Taco are gone, but Tacolicious To Go opens Tuesday at 111 W. Market Street in New Albany.


Last week all traces of El Rico Taco disappeared from Destinations Booksellers (604 E. Spring St.), and that's too bad. They were friendly people and their food was quite good. I'll remember those tamales for a long while.

It's worth remembering that even in such a restaurant incubator setting, eatery owners need operating capital to get through the first six months to a year. Goodbye, El Rico Taco. It seems we hardly knew ye.

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1,134

LIVE TO EAT: This commentary is a postscript to the Mirin New Albany closing.


Would the advent of the Reisz Mahal have helped pull Mirin New Albany through the doldrums? Maybe, except I'm having trouble imagining the aesthetic assassins who populate Gahan's regime finding comfort in sophisticated Asian noodles. Gahan's more the Bud Light and White Castle ramen sort, and his minions shamelessly pander to his stunted tastes in an effort to avoid 2:00 a.m. phone calls.

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1,483

Mirin's second location in New Albany has closed, according to its owner.


Mirin New Albany, the second location of Griffin Paulin's eatery in Louisville, has closed. The story broke at Food & Dining Magazine.

Sunday, September 02, 2018

This Top Ten list of most-viewed August posts at NA Confidential was the hardest one to compile, ever.


If you're on Twitter and aren't following Hon. Deaf Gahan, go there immediately and enjoy the shadow mayoral account.

Thanks for reading NA Confidential, where we enjoy reconnoitering the neglected periphery for uniquely local perspectives on life in New Albany.

These monthly compilations typically make use of a boilerplate introduction, but August 2018 will be an exception.

Neither NA Confidential nor its creator are configured to make money. I've resisted all temptations to monetize the blog, to run Google ads, or seek to find sponsors of my own. Consequently, I pay little attention to the statistics. This blog exists because you're entitled to my opinion, and my opinions torment me with an unimaginably painful sort constipation if they remain bottled up inside.

At several junctures in the past, page views have exploded for a particular post, and a bit of back channel observation usually suffices to see whether the numbers are legitimate, or boosted by spiders, bots and various other creepy crawlers. All things considered, the all-time peak for (mostly) verified page views came when Eric Morris was kind enough to give the blog an exclusive on his preview of Hull & High Water.

Here is how the "top three" all-timers look now.


To put 52,633 in context, there are less than 38,000 people living in the city of New Albany at the present time.

Simply stated, an amazing quintupling of readership, but a phenomenon made possible only through the unnecessary death of a wonderful young man, occurring just down the block from where he lived. It's bittersweet, and I'm conflicted about this top ten list.

Moreover, as I've been scrolling back through the purely sadistic month of August in New Gahania, with more tales from the dull Gahan clique's Corruption Junction than anyone could intelligibly begin to record, the inspiration for David Duggins' anchor branding logo finally makes sense.

New Albany's "brand" is an anchor because we're a ship of fools. 

The August most-viewed list begins with ten "honorable mention" posts, before concluding with the Top Ten, escalating to No. 1. These statistics are derived from Google's internal accounting.

AUGUST HONORABLE MENTION (10)

419

As HUD's public housing smoking ban goes nationwide, Duggins and his merry elves pre-sign a ream of eviction forms.


Let's not forget the relaxation of mandatory drug testing for NAHA employees, as implemented somewhat curiously just as David Duggins came bounding up the front steps to assume his six-figure salary), it should be obvious that previously unattainable zealotry as it pertains to the junta's local enforcement of this nationwide public housing smoking ban might well result in displaced former residents and unoccupied units.

Or, Gahan's goal from the very start of the putsch. We don't have a compassion gap in New Albany. Compassion Chasm is more like it.

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433

Gahan belatedly rediscovers misplaced "pride," appoints Warren Harding Nash to the long lost Human Rights Commission, and disappears back into the bunker.


Cliff Staten (father of the current redevelopment director) will be joining Nash (current Board of Public Works and Safety president, spectacularly failed mayor and the father of a sitting council member) as Gahan's long delayed appointments to Dear Leader's intentionally moribund Human Rights Commission, coincidentally enabling the HRC's sudden resurrection just as the heat is starting to come down on Squire Adam's unresponsive Donnelly Democrats for not giving a tinker's damn about human rights.

If you believe that Warren Nash on the Human Rights Commission somehow differs from Scott Pruitt in charge of the EPA, please drop me a line.

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453 (tie)

PINTS & UNION PORTFOLIO: Beer Tuesday Talk & Taste, and Tabletop Tuesday; beer and board gaming starting Tuesday, August 14.


As often as humanly possible, I'll be upstairs at between 5:00 p.m. and at least 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday evenings, starting Tuesday, August 14.

This weekly event is strictly informal, and you need not be present at any precise time, just at any point within the window. It's not exactly a class, and there'll be no tests. However, there'll be a beer of the week; purchase one downstairs, bring the beer upstairs, and we'll talk it over.

The conversation might lead somewhere, or not much of anywhere at all. However, it's your chance to learn about beer styles and ask me questions.

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453 (tie)

Chicanery as always: City Hall gifts us with the 238-page draft zoning ordinance a mere 24 hours before two "public input" meetings. Rental property owners, turn to page 159.


It's almost as though Gahan's lickspittles don't want members of the public to have time to digest a document that if passed surely will mark the single greatest expansion ever of city government's powers.

In other words, if your idea of progress is David Barksdale wielding 238 pages of details in a daily crusade to coerce 37,000 residents into organizing the condiment bottles by size and purpose, then this complete absence of fair vetting time will be orgasmic.

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457

BEER WITH A SOCIALIST: Pints&union begins regular hours tonight, and there's a "luxuriant brunette brew" to help celebrate.


Last weekend's two "soft" opening evenings were helpful, and tweaks will continue to be made. Expect a few adjustments to the hours of operation during the first couple of weeks, and note that because the pub's kitchen hood was the very last item to be installed, edibles are still being dialed in.

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462

ON THE AVENUES: There's only one way to cure City Hall's institutional bias against non-automotive street grid users, and that's to #FlushTheClique.


Institutional bias helps to explain why Jeff Speck’s proposals to revolutionize our city’s street grid suffered a grim and meticulous death by a thousand belches and almost as many farts.

Speck’s plan was pruned again and again until the majority of design mechanisms intended to bring about the greatest positive change for the greatest number of overall users, whether behind the wheel of a car or navigating a skateboard, were left despoiled on the cutting room floor amid the laughter of Pinocchio Rosenbarger and David “Playboy of the Western World” Duggins.

Isolated in an otherwise untouched design vacuum, stripped of Speck’s ancillary buttresses, two-way traffic alone couldn’t have ever proven capable of transformation. It has been slightly helpful within its straitjacket, as tailored by the most intellectually deficient mayor in this city’s history, but it needs lots of help, beginning with one simply imperative.

Flush the fuckers, ASAP.

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496

A purely sadistic week in New Gahania, and even more tales from Corruption Junction.


Welcome to the increasingly rocky reign of Crooked Jeffrey.

Even Donald Trump had a better week than our increasingly out of touch, cash-obsessed and graft-ridden Ceausescu fetishist. I hear Joseph Kabila is a free agent; maybe with a bit of added TIF funding, Gahan can outbid LeBron's resurgent Lakers and put the idle Congolese strongman in charge of Fairview Cemetery.

Take it away, Mr. Gillenwater.

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501

SHANE'S EXCELLENT NEW WORDS: Dogs caused the farmers market to jump the shark, according to germophobic jazz icon.


Speaking of animals, it seems the presence of dogs at New Albany's farmers market has single-handedly rejuvenated the newspaper's letters section.

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547

Not a single tree in this city has a chance so long as David Barksdale and Jeff Gahan wield the chain saws, and Freud would have a field day with the phallic symbolism.


Deforestation hinders the stormwater control effort, but let's not ignore how stupefyingly banal this message reads, although the mayor has a reasonable retort: "Do you really think I write the words my name is attached to"?

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570

Learn about the Taco Steve Recovery Fund at GoFundMe.


To know Stephen "Taco Steve" Powell is to love the guy, so consider a donation to help with his recovery from a broken hip. In terms of business, Steve has staff, and things are on a normal footing.

Here's to fast healing.

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668

GREEN MOUSE SAYS: What does it mean, this social media surge by Nick Vaughn?


Surely Vaughn is hinting at a campaign of some sort in 2019, and given the ongoing silence from presumptive GOP mayoral candidate Mark Seabrook, it would seem an advancing charisma gap is being preemptively addressed. Gahan's gotta go, but Republicans need to bring their A-game if they're serious about overturning Dear Leader's vast stacks of cash.

Energy and enthusiasm wouldn't hurt, "red wave" aspirants. Vaughn has both in abundance.

AUGUST TOP TEN

728

On John McCain.


By periodically standing up to our diminutive Trumpolini, McCain was praised by progressives even before his death, and termed by his ideological opposites to be the far better man; then again, I have discolored pocket lint of higher caliber than The Donald.

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740

If I devote two minutes to providing solid information about the house at 921 Culbertson, are they billable minutes? Can I at least get a Dewey button, or maybe one extra newspaper article per month?


Of course, the newspaper typically ignores neighborhood matters like this house until handed a prurient reason to send a stenographer -- maybe a fire, or a drug bust -- and there apparently isn't a coherent editorial policy governing such matters (perhaps Bullet Bill Hanson is afraid of insulting a slumlord who advertises), but you already knew this. Just imagine if they devoted a similar focus more often.

But here's the annoying thing.

It took me, a rank amateur, all of two minutes to find the information in the next three photos.

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797

Dead Man's Curve has killed, and it will kill again unless our cowardly ruling clique does its job.


Sorry, but we need to be blunt.

We can't possibly be progressive unless the truth about street safety for all users is told aloud, and make no mistake: if the speed-through status quo works for you, that's not progressive at all.

In fact, it's embarrassingly regressive.


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858

Ladies and gentlemen, allow me to rant in a unique way about the jail tax.



It would be mighty helpful in explicating Gahan's myriad ethical shortcomings if the occasional sign of a pulse dimly emanated from the right, and not only the left, where as the rare social democrat (lower case, please) in the room, I tire of waging a one-front war against Team Gahan's larcenous stupidity.

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933

Seismologists record earthshaking Tree Board orgasms as Schoolmaster Barksdale's chain saw strikes again.


It's been a tough week if you're a downtown New Albany street tree.

When one of your brethren decided to strike a blow against car-centrism, it was inevitable that hostages would be taken, tried, sentenced and quickly dispatched.

No last meals or final requests, just those signature red plastic bands -- and the sound of chortling from Schoolmaster Barksdale as his trademark Husqvarna was lubed and revved for duty.

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1,102

Ooh, ooh, that smell: 5th district councilman Matt Nash, a key supporter of Jeff Gahan's colonial agenda, now is employed by the New Albany Housing Authority -- the mayor's personal colonial realm.


Naturally, we can expect Shane Gibson to ooze forward in a pool of cash-scented K-Y Jelly, arrogantly assuring us there’s nothing at all unethical, or suggestive of a conflict of interest, about just another councilman getting a federal government job.

Except Matt hardly is just another councilman, and it remains that every last decision-maker at the New Albany Housing Authority was put into place not by a clueless bureaucrat in Washington DC, but by toadies and bootlickers inserted into NAHA by Jeff Gahan himself, as charged with performing politically-motivated tasks precisely like this one.

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1,370

Mt. Tabor residents haven't finished yet, as Deaf Gahan faces a court date: "Eminent Domain Law Put to Test Against City of New Albany."


Welcome to NA Confidential's 13,000th career post.

The Green Mouse has received a press release: "Eminent Domain Law Put to Test Against City of New Albany," and it's a corker, but before we revisit the overreach that city officials refer as Mt. Tabor Road Restoration and Pedestrian Safety Project (is the phrasing totalitarian or Rosenbargerian?) let's recall an undisputed stone cold classic video clip from earlier in 2018.

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1,409

"Rev. Bernice Hicks, founder of Christ Gospel Church, dies."


I have neither the time nor the energy to devote to a detailed rendering of the religious quackery embodied by Bernice Hicks, who died a few days ago. However, we all deserve an obituary, even if it avoids the controversial bits.

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4,966

#LiveLikeMatt -- and how you can help Matt Brewer's wife and family.


The local newspaper of record provides coverage of yesterday's gathering of hundreds at the skate park on the riverfront. There's a plan afoot to rehabilitate the skate park, and Matt was involved as a consultant. It is slated to be called the New Albany Flow Park, which is nice enough, but it's a replaceable name since overtaken by events.

By community acclamation, it's now the Matt Brewer Flow Park, or some similar wording of explicit recognition. I strongly encourage local powers that be to endorse this naming notion without further delay. Bureaucracy can be damned -- we all know Matt's name needs to be on a facility of which we all can be proud.

Let's not settle for less.

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52,633

Last night a driver killed a skateboarder at 9th & Spring. His name was Matt Brewer, and he was one helluva guy.


The hardest thing in the world right now for me is to suppress my anger. I know there'll be time to channel this anger into something useful; it's just awfully difficult to avoid lashing out.

My friend Ryan Hammel wrote this at Facebook, and it is spot on. Matt was everyone's friend, and a valued neighbor of ours on Spring Street.

Saturday, September 02, 2017

Top Ten posts at NA Confidential for August, 2017.

It was the month's top post, so did Wendy Dant Chesser see this infographic from Money Choice?

Thanks for reading NA Confidential, where we enjoy scanning the neglected periphery for uniquely local perspectives.

I'm delighted at NAC's August numbers, especially your attention to the "Grid Control" series. Overall, August readership testifies to a keen ongoing interest in New Albany stories, perhaps because they're being chronically under-served elsewhere.

The list begins with ten "honorable mention" posts, before concluding with the Top Ten, escalating to No. 1. Stats are derived from Google's internal numbers listings.

AUGUST TEN HONORABLE MENTION

356

Dan Coffey plans his own unity rally, because why should those smarty pants Democrats have all the fun?



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359

Develop New Albany's Broccoli Walk is August 12. What? Oops, sorry -- it's a Taco Walk.


I still think broccoli is getting the short end of the "signature" event, though tacos are nice, too. Here is the list of participating establishments.

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364 (tie)

On the errant notion of downtown two-way gridlock: The "I'll huff and puff and boycott a place I rarely go anyway, except to pass through" approach.


There is a word that can't be repeated often enough to those who threaten to boycott downtown because two-way streets will require them to drive a tad more slowly and (heaven forbid) pay attention to the community outside their car windows:

Promise?

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364 (tie)

GREEN MOUSE SAYS: This new electronic sign at St. Mary's did not receive a COA from the New Albany Historic Preservation Commission (hint: it's illegal).


It's a tad disappointing that as a beneficiary of Super Tuesday's historic preservation largess distribution (and a questionable one, in my estimation), the church didn't follow COA procedures with the new electronic sign. It will be doubly disappointing if City Hall, after these puffy days of publicly celebrating its preservation credentials, doesn't enforce the rules. After all, unequal enforcement is in many respects worse than no enforcement at all.

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374

Terrified populace braces for 2-way apocalypse, coming later today, only a decade too late.


However, we're told that today at some as yet undefined juncture, Spring Street will revert to two-way traffic after a half-century in captivity.

Pearl and Bank are to follow tomorrow, then Market, and finally Elm. September 30 is the deadline for erasing the city's damaging one-way mentality, albeit it with anchors symbolic of stasis marking every corner.

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379 (tie)

Newspaper letter writer savages a failing, flailing and floundering Duggins at the NAHA, and follows the bread crumbs back to Deaf Gahan.


The Deputy Executive Director mentioned in Susan Ryan's letter (below) is Tony Toran, a former city official and longtime Democratic Party higher-up. This and other carefully pre-scripted "surprises" occurred at last Monday's New Albany Housing Authority meeting, but numerous reports of David Duggins' escalating managerial incompetence have been coursing through the Green Mouse's grapevine for weeks.

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379 (tie)

GREEN MOUSE SAYS: Is Denton Floyd acquiring the Reisz building for use by a relocated NA City Hall? We think a deal is imminent.


The Green Mouse since has been told that Team Gahan will soon reveal a deal for the Schmitt family to sell the long moribund Reisz Furniture Warehouse Store to Denton Floyd Real Estate Group, the Louisville developer currently rehabilitating the old M. Fine & Sons factory at the 140 block of East Main.

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392

Thanks, Gahan: Deaf called it "a blight and eyesore for the area," so he acted swiftly ... to create another one in its place.


Back in March, a scandal-plagued Jeff Gahan explained why he had to demolish buildings at the corner of Market and Vincennes. He didn't say anything about creating a post-industrial wasteland in the aftermath, but maybe the memo got lost when Duggins took all the city's bulldozers over to the New Albany Housing Authority ... with Democratic Party approval.

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393

Hoard this: Contest concludes as Clint finds the "Entrance to Jeff Gahan's Down Low Bunker."



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394

Told you so: "New Albany in talks to relocate City Hall to Reisz Furniture building."


Thanks to the News and Tribune's Elizabeth Beilman for confirming what NA Confidential published yesterday.

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423

James "U of L" Ramsey, sombreros, stereotypes and DNA's institutional legacy of tone deafness.



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424

ON THE AVENUES SATURDAY SPECIAL: One-ways on the way out, because with downtown at a crossroads, they simply had to be exterminated.


I’ve noticed that as we debate two-way streets in New Albany, or more accurately, as proponents offer ream after ream of statistical evidence even as opponents respond by screaming and threatening to maul someone, those of the one-way persuasion tend to say "I" and "me" a lot, while those interested in more than one path through life use words like "we," "us" and “ours.”

AUGUST TOP TEN

480

Croissants d'BBQ Bologna: Dan Coffey says that restaurants are taking up the sidewalk and his compatriots damn well better do something about it.


Coffey's germ of truth is irrefutable, because disabled users really do face myriad daily challenges attempting to navigate the city of New Albany's sidewalks and streets.

But making this point by attacking the city's food and dining community, which has done more than any other economic sector to make downtown habitable again, misses the larger truth by a Birdseye mile.

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518

Dear ordinance enforcement: Each of these signs at Breakwater is illegally posted. You'll want to address it, of course.



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543

"Lost our parking, store closing," says Reeder's Cleaner of Spring Street location in New Albany.


At least I assume Reeder's has closed its Spring Street location; so said the signs, but I haven't walked up that way lately to double check. Speaking personally, while I haven't used dry cleaning services for many years, I was always struck by the sign above the door.

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561

30 years ago today on THE BEER BEAT: Visiting the Carlsberg brewery just prior to the Altercation in Copenhagen.


Carlsberg would be a return visit for me, and this passage from the 1985 travel narrative sets the scene as well as reiterating what led us to beers of the world in the first place. I've inserted the 1987 photos into 1985 commentary.

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888

Grid Control, Vol. 23: City's fuddy-duddies losing their minds as the debut for a two-way Spring Street is pegged at August 29.


Thirteen years later, it's the end of the beginning. Speaking personally, I think the Spring Street conversion announcement should have been made at roughly 2:30 p.m. on Monday, when the combination of a solar eclipse and impending two-way-street rationality (finally) would have sent the Luddites streaming panic-stricken toward Birdseye.

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1,130

Let's all eat at Israel's Delicias de Mexico Gourmet on Saturday, August 12.


If you're not planning on Taco Walking and still need to eat at some point on Saturday, allow me to suggest that while it isn't located in the epicenter of downtown New Albany, Israel's Delicias de Mexico Gourmet (1515 E. Market Street) would be a great place to have a meal.

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1,156

Grid Control, Vol. 22: City engineer Larry Summers answers our questions about intersection striping errors and the "No Trucks" sign removal.


In Vol. 21, we asked questions about the soon-to-be-repaved intersection at Spring and 10th Street, and the disappearing "No Trucks" sign at the intersection of Spring and Vincennes. Afterward, city engineer Larry Summers swooped into a discussion at the New Albany Indiana page at Facebook and gave these answers.

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1,324

Grid Control, Vol. 20: As Team Gahan dawdles, another bicyclist is crushed into mincemeat at 10th & Spring's dangerous dogleg.


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1,334

Grid Control, Vol. 19: In a positive move, HWC begins righting the wrong cross hatching on Spring Street.


It's been roughly six weeks since NAC broke the errant cross hatching story. At the most recent BoW meeting, city engineer Larry Summers said he expected repairs to occur before the debut of two-way traffic, and that doing so would not require the westbound lane of Spring Street to be closed.

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1,579

Here's one for Wendy: "How Corporate Welfare Is Killing Small Businesses."


Despite being the backbone of the economy, funding from the Small Business Administration is a fraction of that of corporate welfare.

Saturday, September 03, 2016

Top Ten posts at NA Confidential for August, 2016.

Another day, another pedestrian struck by a driver at Spring & Vincennes.

Thanks for reading NA Confidential, where we annoyingly burrow beneath the headlines to offer unique local perspectives. August was yet another fine month in terms of blog traffic, and the posts highlighted here attest to a keen interest in local stories, perhaps because they're not being served elsewhere.

The list begins with fifteen "honorable mention" posts, before concluding with the Top Ten, escalating to No. 1. Stats are derived from Google's internal numbers listings.

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FIFTEEN HONORABLE MENTION

426

The mark of The Pirate? If so, the orange paint would be applied to the sign itself, not the post.


427

RENOVATION UPDATE: You know, that building where Walgreen's and SS Kresge used to be (302 Pearl Street).


428

Streets are our most fundamental shared public spaces, but Irv and Bob and Padgett won't grasp this in a thousand million years.


430 (tie)

What they're saying: As the GOP candidate for county commissioner, Billy Stewart just surprised the Hell right out of me.


430 (tie)

Henderson ethics, schMETHics: Matt Oakley challenges the Floyd County power duopoly. Matt Oakley loses. Turn the page.


432

I'll be voting for Dennis O. Roudenbush, the independent candidate for Floyd County 3rd District Commissioner.


438

Pacers & Racers store expansion is under way.


440 (tie)

RENOVATION UPDATE: You know, that building where Abe's Rental used to be (140 E Main St).


440 (tie)

ON THE AVENUES: DNA, National Main Street, the Four Points, and how it might yet be possible to get this thing right for once.


448

The Baptist Tabernacle (316 E. 4th) has new windows, and renovation work continues.


455

Sunday rumination: Independent local merchants can't shy away from the big picture.


456

In spite of the best pressboard TIF can buy, "Many downtown luxury apartments sit empty."


463

More bullies and bullying from the Sunday summit of the bully pulpit.


470

Seven views of the New Albany Riverfront Amphitheater's deteriorating observation deck.


473

Main Street median is spurned as John Rosenbarger's urn is burned on the return -- yet again.


488

Matt Oakley's assessment of the prosecutor's ethical breakdown doesn't stop with Keith Henderson.


516

334 days later, the News and Tribunefinally explains: New Albany was screwed for almost a year so the paper can "redefine" its approach. Thanks, Bill. May we have another?


TOP TEN

543

Where'd you get those birds? Somehow New Albany's water park fails to retain yet another business.


545

Those little extras: Taco Steve could be selling beer some time in September.


558

#GahanSafe: All the push-button "walk" signals for crossing Spring at Pearl are defective, and have been for five months to a year.


583

Letter to the editor: "I've spent a lot of time thinking about the school referendum."


585

No decision has been reached on new Street Piano Project, says Board of Works and Public Safety.


680

When it comes to public sightings, three for three is just too much to ask.


717

Aladdin's Cafe is up and running at its new Underground Station location.


728

Moldering pile of shit celebrates three-month anniversary by the sidewalk in front of Ron Craig's rental property on Market Street.


1,003

Join Gregg Seidl for a farewell Drinking with the Dead haunted history tour on Saturday, August 20.


1,327

BREAKING: Two more pedestrians have been struck by a driver at the intersection of Spring and Vincennes.

Tuesday, September 01, 2015

Top Ten posts at NA Confidential for August, 2015.

He may have something to do with the month's top-ranking post.

The August Top Ten is determined by numbers of unique hits, as reported by Blogger.

The list begins with 10 honorable mention posts, before concluding with the Top Ten, escalating to No. 1.

I believe this is the first month since the "Top Ten" was calculated that every post listed recorded more than 200 hits.

Thanks for reading.

Obviously, you are reading, even if some observers in City Hall are fond of pretending otherwise. Isn't it funny how they invariably reply publicly to what they haven't read on the down-low?

HONORABLE MENTION

202

Fundamentally delayed: The New Albany Street Piano "Grand Opening" is Saturday, September 5.


210

Why "a great experience is priceless" is the worst answer for any city employee to give.


214

Floyd County Council rejects the RDA and RCI. Will the city of New Albany now rush to enlist?


223

Maybe this photo explains why Jeff Gahan appeases Dan Coffey's homophobia.


235

Autocentrism vs. ADA 101: Vectren's first thought is to block the sidewalk.


245

Clere: "(River Run) and other spending may leave New Albany taxpayers swimming in debt."


253 (tie)

ON THE AVENUES: Money is the ultimate bully.


253 (tie)

New Albany's new slogan: "Truck Through City" ... Part 98: Diesel-fueled postcard vistas of downtown on a Bored to Death of Works Tuesday!


257

Let's give this illustration a brand new caption.


261

We've located the Gahan Sweater Dogs.


272

Hey, ESNA.


TOP TEN

276

Baylor for Mayor: 3 Goals + 7 Platform Points.


295

Jeff Gahan explains pop-up TIFs and trickle-down parks.


306

Fieldhaus, Brownie's "The Shed", Over the 9, Falls City, Old 502 and what they all mean.


362

GAHANS STRIKE BACK: Street piano approved but the social media fur begins to fly.


368

ON THE AVENUES: It’s time to purge two-party politics and tie the community together.


380

Crazed ragpicker poses as city employee, makes terroristic threats to laughing-out-loud store owner.


457

Mayor Gahan announces compromise street piano measure.


521

A future mayor? An ex-brewery owner? 30 years later, there's another fork in the road, and I'm pumped.


538

Let's go Krogering?: Does CM Blair's fixation with a boarded-up Hardee's have to do with gas pumps and corporate welfare?


547

Stephen "Taco Steve" Powell, his taco cart, and downtown New Albany.