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CITY/COUNTY MEETING DATES

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CITY/COUNTY MEETINGS-MEETING  DATES/TIME AGENDA

Design Review Committee 11/24/2015 8:30 AM

County Commission Meeting 11/24/2015 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM

Site/Subdivision Review 11/30/2015 10:00 AM

Evansville Redevelopment Commission 12/1/2015 8:30

County Council Meeting 12/2/2015 3:30 PM – 4:30 PM

Draft Comprehensive Plan 2015-2035 12/2/2015 6:00 PM

APC Draft Comprehensive Plan Public Hearing 12/2/2015 6:00 PM

RECYCLE DAY 12/5/2015 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Site/Subdivision Review 12/7/2015 10:00 AM

Historic Preservation Commission 12/7/2015 5:30 PM

Design Review Committee 12/8/2015 8:30 AM

SOLID WASTE DISTRICT BOARD MEETING 12/8/2015 4:00 PM – 4:30 PM

County Commission / Rezoning Meeting 12/8/2015 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM

Drainage Board Meeting 12/8/2015 5:30 PM – 6:00 PM

Board of Health Meeting 12/10/2015 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM

Area Plan Commission 12/10/2015 4:00 PM

Site/Subdivision Review 12/14/2015 10:00 AM

Evansville Redevelopment Commission 12/15/2015 8:30 AM

Board of Zoning Appeals 12/17/2015 4:00 PM

Site/Subdivision Review 12/21/2015 10:00 AM N

Drainage Board Meeting 12/22/2015 5:30 PM – 6:00 PM

Site/Subdivision Review 12/28/2015 10:00 AM

Recycle Day 1/9/2016 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Board of Health Meeting 1/14/2016 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM

Area Plan Commission 1/14/2016 4:00 PM

Recycle Day 1/16/2016 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Arts Council Holiday Art Sale

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318 MAIN STREET, SUITE 101
DOWNTOWN EVANSVILLE

USI ink seven incoming freshmen for 2017

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University of Southern Indiana Baseball announced the signing of seven incoming freshmen for the 2017 season in the early signing period. USI and Head Coach Tracy Archuleta have signed five incoming student athletes from Indiana and a pair from Kentucky.

Selecting USI to continue their education and begin their collegiate baseball careers are right-handed pitcher Tyler Hagedorn (Evansville, Indiana), outfielder Aaron Euler (Evansville, Indiana), infielder Trevor Ricker (Evansville, Indiana), right-handed pitcher Grant Ellis (Terre Haute, Indiana), left-handed hitting infielder/outfielder Bryce Krizan (Mt. Vernon, Indiana), outfielder Lucas Thatcher (Lexington, Kentucky), and outfielder Garrett Wilson (West Point, Kentucky).

“These seven recruits fit our system very well and we look forward to working with them over the next four years,” said Archuleta. “Assistant Coaches Jeremy Kuester and Caleb Eickhoff have a done a great job finding players that fit our program.”

Biographies of USI Baseball’s fall signees:

Hagedorn: The right-handed hurler was the SIAC Most Valuable Player, the Evansville Player of the Year and the Outstanding Pitcher in 2015 as a junior after going 5-4 with a 0.96 ERA for North High School (Evansville, Indiana)…also lettered in basketball at NHS.

Euler: The left-handed hitting outfielder is a 2015 first-team All-SIAC and All-Metro performer for Reitz High School (Evansville, Indiana) after hitting .385 with 26 RBIs and three home runs as a junior…helped lead RHS to the 2015 baseball sectional title and the 2014 football sectional football crown…also lettered in football at RHS.

Ricker: The right-handed hitting infielder lettered in baseball at Reitz High School (Evansville, Indiana) and helped the Panthers to the 2015 sectional championship…played for the Ironmen Baseball Club, hitting 413 in 2015.

Ellis: The right-handed pitcher has posted an 8-1 record over the last two years for South Vigo High School (Terre Haute, Indiana), going 5-1 as a sophomore and 3-0 as a junior…helped SVHS to the Big 4 and Braves Bash championships in 2014.

Krizan: The left-handed hitting utility player is a two-sports athlete at Mt. Vernon High School (Mt. Vernon, Indiana), lettering in baseball and basketball…helped MVHS to the Big Eight and sectional titles in 2015 with an appearance in the regional finals…batted .517 in 2015 and .467 in 2014 for the Mt. Vernon American Legion…younger brother of current Screaming Eagle Austin Krizan.

Wilson: A right-handed hitting outfielder is a three-sport letterwinner in baseball, basketball, and track at Bullitt East High School (Mount Washington, Kentucky)…has helped BEHS to three district championships in baseball and basketball, in addition to district and regional titles in track.

Thatcher: A right-handed hitting outfielder is a 2015 All-County and a 2014 All-Region performer at East Jessamine High School (Nicholasville, Kentucky).

TURKEY SHORTAGE

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THUNDEBOLTS TAKE THANKSGIVING BREAK AFTER PUSHING ATLANTA TO THE LIMIT

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THE ‘BOLTS “K-G-B” FORWARD LINE ON SCORING SCOURGE FOR EVANSVILLE SQUAD T-BOLTS NEXT ACTION DECEMBER 4TH AND DECEMBER 5TH AT POINT MALLARD DUCKS

LAST WEEK’S RESULTS: 2(0-2-0) 6-19 FRI. NOV. 20 ATLANTA 13 ‘BOLTS 1 SAT. NOV. 21 ATLANTA 6 AT ‘BOLTS 5

UPCOMING GAMES: (2) FRI. DEC. 4 AT POINT MALLARD 7:30 PM SAT. DEC. 4 AT POINT MALLARD 6:00 PM

NEXT HOME GAMES: FRI. JAN. 15 & SAT. JAN 16 VS. ST. LOUIS JR. BLUES 7:30 PM / SWONDER *** ALL THUNDERBOLTS GAMES ARE BROADCAST LIVE ON EVANSVILLE’S WVHI-AM 1330 ***

LIGHTNING BOLTS’ SHOTS: Having completed the first 18-games of their 2015-16 NA3HL schedule, the fledgling Evansville ThunderBolts will collectively take the holiday week of Thanksgiving to rest, relax and reflect. Under the astute and argute auspices of General Manager/Head Coach Scott Fankhouser, the ThunderBolts have reached their second week of hiatus following the conclusion of an extended four-game home stand which effectively capped their six-game November 2015 schedule. The State of Indiana’s only exclusive elite junior hockey club will not resume action until the first weekend of December when they open a two-game series in Decatur, Alabama where they will tackle the South Division front-running Point Mallard Ducks. The dates of those two clashes are set for Friday, December 4th and Saturday December 5th with both live radio broadcasts set to launch at 7:00 pm December 4th and 5:30 pm December 5th on Evansville’s WVHI-AM 1330 and on the world-wide internet at www.wvhi.com. The ThunderBolts next 11-games will be played on the road.

TALE OF TWO TEAMS ON TWO NIGHTS: The past weekend was witnessed to a tale of two teams on two nights, prompting the rhetorical question, “Will the real Evansville ThunderBolts please stand up.” Spending the weekend hosting and battling one of the most talented and gifted teams in the League in the form of the South Division Atlanta Capitals, the ‘Bolts bowed in game one on Friday night, 13-1, in a rather humbling episode before going to the wire 24-hours later in a 6-5 affair Saturday night also at Swonder Ice Arena. After sustaining their worst defeat of the campaign one night earlier, the T-Bolts rallied remarkably and resoundingly from 3-0 and 4-2 deficits Saturday eve to seize a short-lived 5-4 third period lead, their first-ever third period advantage, until Atlanta rallied late to escape with its 12th consecutive road win. Coach Fankhouser’s aggregation may have earned a better fate and destiny in the latter contest in suffering its fifth one-goal differentiating defeat of the inaugural campaign.

SCHEDULE SCANNING: With the holiday week of Thanksgiving being an idle week for the ThunderBolts, game activity does not resume for the hometown team until the first weekend of December when they sojourn to Decatur,

Alabama to test with the Point Mallard Ducks. The Evansville squadron will be fighting the good fight for their next 11-games in the hostile environment of foreign ice territory throughout the entire month of December. Included in the ‘Bolts travel manifest, in addition to their excursion to Point Mallard, will be alien ice warfare in Peoria as well as three games in three days December 16 – 19 when they play in the NA3HL’s Annual Showcase Event in Blaine, Minnesota. Their three opponents for the League-sanctioned games which do count in the overall standings will be the Lacrosse Freeze, Gillette Wild and the Minnesota Fighting Aces.

NEXT HOMESTEAD HOMESTAND: The ThunderBolts next home appearance at Swonder Ice Arena will not be until the weekend of January 15th and 16th when they rekindle animosities with the Midwest Division pace-setting St. Louis Jr. Blues. Opening face-off both nights will be 7:30 pm. There are 11-more home dates remaining on the ‘Bolts regular season slate with 5 of those dates set for Friday night with 6-more Saturday night dates still remaining.

THE “K-G-B” LINE LUSTY: The ThunderBolts top forward line comprised of Mike Kelley, Jon Grimm and Brandon Bornkamp has emerged as one of the truly pre-eminent, potent triumvirates in the NA3HL. In the past two- game weekend series against powerhouse Atlanta, the “K-G-B’s” accounted for all of the team’s half-dozen goals with Bornkamp triggering a “Trifecta” of snipes, Grimm collecting a pair and Kelley caging a singleton. For the weekend, the trending “troika” compiled a composite 15-points on 6-goals, 9-assists along with 3-PPG.

“JONNY B. GOOD:” ThunderBolts team captain Jon Grimm fashioned some sweet-sleek scoring stylings the past Saturday night. The talented left wing engineered a masterful 5-points’ performance on 2-goals, 3-assists in earning the Penn Station/ThunderBolts Star of the Game honors. His 5-points’ masterpiece represented the best single game offensive output by a ‘Bolts player thus far this season. Both of Grimm’s goals were cannonaded in the second stanza to fuse a remarkable 4-goal comeback powder keg which eradicated 3-0 and 4-2 deficits to forge a 4-4 tie. The local product from Newburgh attained the stellar status of his team’s top point-meister for the month of November with 6(5-5-10) with 3-PPG, 3-PPA, 1-FG and two 2-goal games.

THE CENTER OF SCORING: Snappy, snazzy center Brandon Bornkamp has developed into a model of scoring proficiency for his hockey club. The State of Indiana’s 2014-15 High School Scoring Champion continues to flash his flair as a natural born marksman. In the weekend set against Atlanta, the Fort Wayne native fired a trio of howitzers, collecting 5-points in all. After delivering his team’s lone strike on Friday night, the swift center-man adeptly and adroitly authored 4-points including a pair of goals the following night. His second goal at the 8:29 mark of the third period on the power play produced the ThunderBolts first-ever third period lead, climaxing a brilliant comeback counterattack crescendo as his team overcame a daunting deficits of 3-0 and 4-2 to seize a 5-4 lead. In his last 9-games, Bornkamp is 9(10-4-14); for November he was 6(7-2-9). His latest point streak has advanced to 4-games; 4(4-2-6). For the season, Bornkamp’s 16-goals rank tied for 4th most in the league; his 25- points have catapulted him among the top 20-scoring artisans in the loop.

BIRTHDAY BOY BRINGING IT: The ThunderBolts team’s youngest player, right wing Mike Kelley just turned 17 on Sunday. The first-year elite junior freshman opted for an earlier celebration with a sharp scoring demonstration, perhaps, a significant sneak-peak at his and the ‘Bolts bright future. Assisting on his club’s sole goal Friday night, the Fort Wayne product achieved his best single-game offensive output on Saturday night. Kelley was the architect of a dynamic 4-points performance which included the key GTG in the ThunderBolts stirring 4-goal come-from behind resurgence while also acting as the playmaker extraordinaire with 3-crafty assists. Presently enjoying a 3-game scoring streak with 3(2-4-6), Kelley was his team’s third top scoring sparkplug for November with 6(2-7-9) with 1-PPG and 3-PPA. In his last 7-games; 7(2-8-10).

AN ASSIST FOR THE DEFENSE: Premiere defenseman Triston Theriot continues to scale the heights of stardom with his steady, superb play on the ‘Bolts blue line. Offensively, the 6-0, 170lb major marquee mainstay has become a major spoke in the ‘Bolts wheel. Essaying a pair a masterful assists Saturday night, Evansville’s best point- producing blue line ace of the place has registered 6-assists through the last 6-games; 6(0-6-6) as his team’s fourth

leading point-maker for November. For the season, Theriot is 18(2-9-11) with 7 of those 11-points generated on the power play; (1-6-7).

EXTRA MAN MONEY: The ThunderBolts power play has been a major bright light of consistency and proficiency thus far this season. The past Saturday night the man advantage ensemble cast was kinetic, connecting three times, going 3-6. It was the first time ever that Evansville’s power play percolated three times in a single game, accomplishing the amazing feat against an Atlanta team which had grudgingly surrendered a minuscule 3-PPGA through 12-road assignments all season long, operating at a sparkling 94% efficiency clip. The ThunderBolts power play is 4 for the last 10; 40%; 7 for the last 23; 30.5%; 8 for the last 28; 28.6%. For the season, the PP has climbed to 13th in the NA3HL, operating at 19.5% proficiency; 15-77.

NOVEMBER NUMEROLOGY: All 7 of the ‘Bolts November PPG were delivered by Jon Grimm (3), Brandon Bornkamp (3) and Mike Kelley (1). Bornkamp (7), Grimm (5), Kelley (2) accounted for 14 of the ‘Bolts 16-GF in November. Brandon Rozema (1) and Mathieu LaForest (1) delivered the other two. Steven Rutherford (28), Billy Bonser (28), Brandon Bornkamp (24) topped the team in PIM for the month. Goaltender Adam Conkling started all 6-ThunderBolts games in November. Bryson Linenburg performed in one relief role.

MAKING A POINT: The ThunderBolts leading point-producers at the Thanksgiving break: 1- Brandon Bornkamp 18(16-9-25); 2- Jon Grimm 18(8-13-21); 3- Mike Kelley 13(4-9-13); 4- Triston Theriot 18(2-9-11); 5- Billy Bonser 15(5-4-9).

FEW FUN FAST FACTS FROM “FIC”: ThunderBolts are 5(0-5-0) in 1-goal decisions with 4 of their last 9- games decided by a singleton. ‘Bolts 5-goal output Saturday night matched for the third time their best scoring offense of the season. Their 4-goal second period Saturday also equaled their best scoring stanza of the season. Defenseman Steven Rutherford’s 24-PIM Friday are a single game high for Evansville. The ‘Bolts have been outscored in the first period on home ice, 24-2 and 34-5 overall. They have scored only one first period goal at home since opening night, September 18th. On Saturday, when they entered the third period tied at 4-4, it marked the first time the ‘Bolts were not trailing after 40-minutes. The ‘Bolts first ever third period lead Saturday night at 5-4 endured for only 1:09 before Atlanta equalized it. Atlanta’s 67-SOG Friday are the second-most the ‘Bolts have allowed this season. Brandon Bornkamp has recorded 3-multi-goal games, including two 3-goal “hat tricks.” Jon Grimm has uncorked two 2-goal games. Grimm and Mike Kelley’s 3-assists Saturday are the most in one game this season.

THE THUNDERBOLTS RADIO UPDATE: ThunderBolts fans can stay up to date even when there is not a game. It’s “The ThunderBolts Hockey Update,” Monday through Friday at 5:00 pm on flagship radio home WVHI- AM 1330 and at 2:30 pm on WEOA-AM 1400 and WEOA-FM 98.5.

Coverdale wins as UE finishes House of Champions

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Sophomore Courtney Coverdale took top honors in the 1-meter dive as the University of Evansville swimming and diving teams completed the House of Champions.

 

“It was a very exciting day, we had some excellent racing and fantastic diving,” head coach Rickey Perkins said.  “I am very proud of the way the team performed this week.  They are responding well to the training and hopefully we continue to improve throughout the remainder of the season.”

 

Coverdale’s score of 260.05 put her on top in the 1-meter event.  Her score was over 12 points better than the competition.   In women’s races, Maja Magnusson, Charlotte Lechner, Mackenzie Harris and Michaela Kent finished the 400 free relay in 3:35.73 to take 8th in the race.  Magnusson had a strong finish in the 1650 free.  She finished the event in 17:45.19 to take 6th.

 

In the 200 backstroke, Taylor Davidson had a strong race as her 2:06.91 placed her in 11th.  Kasey Rein was the top finisher in the 200 fly.  Her 2:13.72 put her in 12th.  In the 200 breaststroke, Amy Smith registered a 12thplace finish of her own, swimming a 2:29.34.

 

The men picked up a 4th place finish in the 400 free relay.  Dan O’Brien, Ethan O’Rourke, Everett Plocek and Matt Childress posted a 3:06.61 to record the high finish.  On his own, O’Rourke had a great showing in the 200 backstroke as his 1:52.31 was good for 5th place.

 

Troy Burger came home seventh in the 200 breaststroke, recording a time of 2:07.35.  Jared Sutphin notched a 16:48.31 to take 11th in the 1650 free.

 

Evansville’s women finished the weekend in 5th out of 10 schools while the men remained in sixth place out of nine.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Sobriety Checkpoint Results for Saturday, November 21, 2015

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
 
 The Evansville-Vanderburgh County Traffic Safety Partnership conducted a sobriety checkpoint on Saturday, November 21, 2015 in the 5000 block of East Virginia Street near Tennis Lane.

A total of 34 vehicles were diverted from East Virginia Street into the checkpoint. The checkpoint ran from 11:30pm to 2:00am.

Just after midnight a vehicle operated by Mr. Dominique Jamal Pointer approached the checkpoint, but then turned abruptly without properly signaling. An Indiana State Police trooper assigned to the perimeter of the checkpoint stopped Mr. Pointer. The trooper recovered multiple bags of marijuana, digital scales, nearly $500 in currency and a handgun from the vehicle. Mr. Pointer was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail.

Funding for local sobriety checkpoint operations is provided by the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI) through a grant from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration(NHTSA).

ARRESTED:

Pictured above: Dominique Jamal Pointer, 20, of Evansville. Dealing Marijuana as a Level 6 Felony, Handgun without a License as a Class A Misdemeanor.

 

Let’s Fix That Tax Sale: 2nd In A Series

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Let’s Fix that tax sale: 2nd in a series

by George Lumley-All Rights Reserved

People want the lots!

Last week I introduced my approach to finding a solution to the tax sale and land banking problem by jumping right in and buying some lots at the tax sale. Ok you negative naysayers: It was a tax sale. The tax sale process is a complicated one with technical jargon but in our everyday language the properties were being offered for sale because of a result of someone’s failure to pay taxes. It appears to me that keeping these empty lots looking good would be a key point in promoting thriving neighborhoods. Who wants to live on a street where grass grows out of control and weeds are as tall as your head. That is right, when a house is for sale or rent, only the people who like unkempt yards want to live there and like they say, birds of a feather flock together.

The story I want to tell today is not the most significant story, or my Christmas Story, but the story that people do want these lots. Yes I even found a Christmas Story at the tax sale that ends happily. It is a story about someone wanting a lot. I had planned to put the story in the my first printed edition of the CCO on Dec. 15, but due to technical difficulties I suppose it will appear here and I will find another big story for the first printed edition of the CCO now slated for January 15, 2016.

The first time I heard that no one wanted these vacant lots was in a response given to me by a city employee about why so many doomed houses were still standing. Why was the city not tearing them down? I was actually told that “no one wanted the lots” so If we tear the building down the city has more grass and weeds to mow. How rediculous! The city is intentionally leaving structures barely standing so there is less grass to mow? Now this same theme of government not doing any more than they absolutely have to runs rampant in Evansville. The city/county will go to great lengths for special interest but claim they have no money or time for everyone’s best interest. The tax sale process with regard to nobody wanting the lots is yet another example.

I began my quest to find out if anyone wanted the lots over a year ago. When I heard the city say they could not find properties for the State blight elimination program and one of the issues was having a use for the lot after a structure was torn down. I volunteered to look into it. Knocking on doors beside vacant houses that were doomed to be razed I found people who would gladly take the lot or split the lot with a neighbor, own the lot, care for the lot, and even pay taxes on the lot if they could just get rid of the Zombie structure (garbage) sitting on the lot. Almost any “use” qualified the structure for the grant funding which was intended to remove these zombie houses that littered the neighborhoods.

I had no problem finding scattered zombie house properties. But the City leaders told me they needed more worthy projects in a targeted area near schools, parks and churches. That was easy. I went to one of the worst areas in Evansville across the street from Howell Park, and put together a project of ten zombie houses on three streets. People in the neighborhood were more than happy to own the lot, maintain the lot and even, pay taxes on the lot if the city would get rid of the zombie house. This time the city listened. They even acted like they cared and were pursuing the project. After eight months I discovered that my project, which was in everyone’s best interest, was not in the city’s special interest and they had really put one over on me.

Now looking at the tax sale process this year the special interest are trying to put one over on our best interest with the stop the tax sale, give all the property to the Brownfields land bank, and also give them $1.7 million in tax dollars to fund their special interest. Let’s shed some light on these tax sale properties. Did you know that 60 properties were quietly transferred from the auction block to the Brownfields before the public had an opportunity to buy them? The Brownfields control them and in some cases you cannot buy them. The Brownfields sells these properties for a profit to who they want, when they want and if they want. Yes, a special interest nonprofit, can still make a profit. No one wants these properties? Now the next special interest pick was to adjoining property owners. Did you know that if you are an adjoining owner to one of these properties the commissioners can sell it to you and it does not go to the “tax sale”? If you knew that, you are an exception. It seems to be a well-kept secret that the lot is available and easily acquired by neighboring property owners. About 30 of the properties were transferred out of the sale using this process by the Commissioners for as little as $1.00 each. In some cases more than one adjacent owner wanted the same lot and the price went up.

I found some very interesting transactions among these thirty properties. One in particular involves a property at 320 W Louisiana St. This is a narrow corner lot that became owned by the county because the Code Enforcement people allowed it to deteriorate to a point of no return; the city paid for the demolition; and now it falls into the hands of the commissioners. I spoke with James who owns the house next to this lot. He wanted it for parking and yard space. James was upset that he was not able to get it. He explained that the lot was too small to build on and he did not see how it would be any value to anyone but him. That is unless he wasn’t there and he assured me that he was not going anywhere. I guess he does not know what code enforcement stands for in Evansville. Some claim the code people to be the eviction police working for special interest and I am starting to see their point.

Well anyway, James offered the County Commissioners a fair price for the lot next to his house. He offered to pay the county $300 for the lot. He wanted to own it, maintain it, and pay taxes on it. There would be no burden to the public tax payers or charities. Well James soon received a letter in the mail that another adjoining owner, Habitat, also wanted the lot and he would have to pay more than they were offering. This often happens because people really do want the lots and are even willing to pay for the privilege of owning, maintaining and paying the taxes. Now the puzzle here is that the other neighboring owner, Habitat, offered $5000 for the lot. Not a typo – that is $5000 for a lot that no one would want. Of the lots that made it to the Auction there was one that actually brought over $10,000. These are vacant lots that our officials are trying to convince us that no one wants.

A new mystery for me and James is why Habitat would out bid him and pay $5000 for the lot next to him. As long as John lives in his house, Habitat can never build on it. He is a young guy and doesn’t plan on going anywhere soon. Habitat now owns the lot beside James and the lot behind it, directly across the alley. Both lots are too narrow to build. Is it possible they are going to start building super narrow houses that span from street to street blocking the alley? Brainstorm, maybe they are going to build up and over the alley. A two story drive through?

As I separate fact from propaganda, special interest from everyone’s best interest, I seem to find more mysteries in a week than I can solve in a month. Why would Habitat pay $5000 for a lot they cannot build on? Why covertly transfer sixty properties to the Brownfields? Why keep the process of adjacent owners buying these properties undisclosed? Why use code enforcement for the special interest of running people out of their properties rather than use it for everyone’s best interest in helping people maintain their properties?

One thing for certain. The propaganda about no one wanting these properties is CRAP. Maybe 5 or 10 out of 100 would be hard to place. The majority 90% could be placed through free enterprise with people who want to own, maintain, and pay taxes on the lots after the garbage houses are removed. No new laws, funding, land banks, etc are needed. We simply need to insure our leaders are looking out for everyone’s best interest rather than their crony’s special interest.