by Michael Dioguardi, reposted from Facebook - The Barnes Fund, another useless waste of money that does nothing to help with affordable housing but creates the appearance that the city is doing “something”.
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A right-leaning disgruntled Republican comments on the news of the day and any other thing he damn-well pleases.
by Michael Dioguardi, reposted from Facebook - The Barnes Fund, another useless waste of money that does nothing to help with affordable housing but creates the appearance that the city is doing “something”.
Sunday at 10 AM – 3 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2020 AT 6 PM – 8:30 PM
The Tennessean - A majority of Metro Council want to deliberate further on a piece of legislation that could curb lifetime health benefits for future elected Nashville council members.
By Rod Williams - The Graceland estate, the former home of Elvis Presley in Memphis, was vandalized sometime between Monday night (Aug. 31) and Tuesday morning (Sept. 1). Memphis' Commercial Appeal reports that vandals spray-painted the front walls surrounding the property with Black Lives Matter and Defund the Police graffiti overnight.
Vandals used black and orange spray paint to write slogans including "Defund MPD" and "BLM" on the sidewalk in front of Graceland along Elvis Presley Boulevard. They also scrawled "#DefundThePolice" and "Abolish ICE" on the sidewalk and the stone wall that surrounds the property.
by Rod Williams - Before the Council tonight is legislation addressing the lifetime benefit of Metro providing health care for former Council members. An attempt to end this benefit has been tried a couple times before and failed. What is on the agenda tonight is a resolution to put back on the Council agenda a bill that would abolish this benefit. Last council meeting the bill that would do this was deferred indefinitely against the will of the sponsor.
Massachusetts and New Jersey tie for the lowest rate of gun ownership in America where only 14.7% of the household have guns, followed by Rhode Island, Hawaii, and New York.
by Rod Williams - Mayor Cooper has proposed a new $1.5 billion transit plan for Nashville just as if we were awash in money and people were clamoring for more public transportation options. I don't guess he has noticed. The Corona-19 government shut down has caused a $200 million hit to revenue projections this year. And, in December we may very likely see a referendum pass that rolls back the 34% (37% in the General Services District) tax increase passed in June.
Also, the public is not on board. In 2018 the public voted against a $9 billion transit plan that would have build a light rail, bus rapid transit, downtown tunnel system. Since the government imposed the economic shutdown, WeGo has been losing millions of dollars. Not only are fewer people riding because they are working from home or have no place to go, but mass transit is a spreader of the disease. On a train or plane or bus, you are breathing the expelled breath of every other person in the conveyance vehicle. Mass transit is a health hazard.
I walk almost every day a trek that takes me down 8th Avenue South over to 12th Avenue South to Belmont Avenue and back. I am not walking at rush hour so I don't know if anyone is riding the bus then but I always notice if anyone is riding the bus. Almost every bus I see is empty except for the driver. Sometimes there may be one or two people on the bus but most of the time they are empty. Why take these big buses to the suburbs and back just as if there were riders for these busses?
Would this not be a good time to think outside the box of doing things the way they have always been done and consider something innovative? Nashville could take the lead in creating a mostly private, paratransit, demand-driven, public transportation system. Now when riding the bus is a health hazard and demand is down would be the time to innovate and experiment.
For more on the Mayor's transit proposal, see this link. For more on my thoughts on pubic transportation see, What to do about Mass Transit and traffic congestion.
by Rod Williams, 8/30/2020 - On Wednesday of this week the State government denied Vanderbilt University Medical Center permission to build a 48-bed medical center in Murfreesboro. Instead, the government decided that St. Thomas could build a hospital in Murfreesboro.
State law requires the construction of new hospitals to be approved by the Tennessee Health Services and Development Agency. The logic of this is that by requiring government approval, the government will prevent the construction of unnecessary or redundant facilities. Once they decide a hospital can be built, I do not know what criteria they use in choosing one company over another.
by Guest columnist Justin Owen, The Tennessean- We have witnessed many unprecedented moments over the past few months. And most of the news has been grim. But as we battle the COVID-19 pandemic, a silver lining is appearing on the edge of the dark clouds. We are witnessing some of the most rapid and exciting improvements in innovation in the history of the world. Justin Owen