Broken Sidewalk is back, and this makes me happy. It is one of the places upon which the eyes of New Albany’s economic development “leaders” should be trained on a daily basis.
I wonder how many of them even know it exists? There was more useful information in Broken Sidewalk’s Friday news roundup yesterday than I’ve heard at various city meetings during the entirety of 2014.
Why? At some point, one comes to the painful realization that we’re not particularly bright here in Nawbony, at least as it pertains to those selected to make decisions.
This does not imply acceptance, merely acknowledgement.
About Broken Sidewalk
Broken Sidewalk covers Louisville, Kentucky.
Broken Sidewalk (BS) is dedicated to the urban realm of the River City, from its neighborhoods to its transportation trends, from real estate happenings to the latest political struggle. The blog was founded in 2006 as a small site documenting the development of downtown Louisville. Since then, brokensidewalk.com has grown to cover the goings on of the greater metropolitan region. We are dedicated to reporting the latest real-estate deal, the most up-to-date project announcements, transportation trends, and all the neighborhood news related to living in our fine city. We follow the ongoing construction progress of exciting development projects and slip in a little of the latest rumor about the future of the city.
BS is a community interested in the future of Louisville. We are young professionals, small business owners, independent musicians, medical researchers, architects, students, teachers, and neighbors. In short, we are Louisville and we are compelled to know what’s affecting our neighborhoods and our lives.
Are you a part of the Broken Sidewalk community?
BS is more than a news source; its a dialogue. What makes brokensidewalk.com work is the input from our community of users. This site has been designed to encourage as much interaction as possible. Each post carries your comments and opinion polls track the pulse of the latest hot topics. Our community also helps run the site. Tips and questions help generate the most cutting-edge content and keep brokensidewalk.com at the forefront of Louisville’s development and neighborhood news. (To send in a tip, simply e.mail tips@brokensidewalk.com.)