Local
A luxury apartment offering beautiful views of 70 West is framed by two massive water tanks. Just a short stroll away from fine dining at Bob Evans – but be careful, because there’s no crosswalk.
And don’t forget the amenities and convenience of two nearby gas stations.
Luxury apartments are sprouting up in the damnedest of places around town. Everywhere you look developers are building complexes where a cavernous 400-sq-ft pad goes for a cool $1,300-a-month and a 775-sq-ft two bedroom for an affordable $2,400/month.
Out west on the Columbus-Hilliard border it gets no weirder than the complex being built on Fisher Road. Many of the apartments will be mere feet from two city water tanks. It will be called Austin Place, built and managed by the locally-owned Donald R. Kenney & Company Realty.
Right next to Austin Place are the luxury apartments of Andover Park, where you have easy access to the sweet sounds of 70 West as well as your next door neighbor’s life considering many residents have complained online how thin (and cheap) the walls are.
Saturday, January 5th, 2019, 12:00 PM. SURJ Columbus Reading Group. Join SURJ Columbus (Showing Up for Racial Justice) for the second installment of our monthly reading group! We meet the first Saturday of the month at various locations throughout the city. For this session we’ll be reading/discussing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter From Birmingham Jail”: https://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/documents/Letter_Birmingham_Jail.pdf
All are welcome. Any members of the public who wish to learn more about getting involved with SURJ are invited to stay for a brief information session AFTER the discussion. Location: Columbus Metropolitan Library - Hilltop Branch, 511 S Hague Ave, Columbus, Ohio 43204
Residents of the planet,
Energy and all its concerns are being solved every day in conversations held by big media pundits and dinner table enthusiasts. The problem is that no one is doing the work – or at least, almost no one.
Headlines will often read that jobs are plentiful in solar and wind industries, but this is not a reality for many employees in related fields around Ohio. Also, many electric customers who pay a surcharge for renewable energy to turn on their lights and charge their smart phones do so purchasing Renewable Energy Credits from a regional marketplace, which only indirectly supports the transition to a clean grid. Thankfully, current Ohio law requires Ohio’s investor owned utilities (IOU), like AEP or First Energy, to generate more electricity from renewable energy each year, reaching 12.5 percent by 2027.
In December, Ohioans from all around the Buckeye State testified their convictions to Public Utility Commission of Ohio (PUCO) board members holding an important hearing. A resounding message spoke of the good it will do for skilled workers that build the proposed 400MW solar system in Highland County.
Venezuela Under Siege
What would you do if you were a socialist who had to manage a capitalist economy in crisis? Or an environmentalist who had to govern a country whose main export was oil and whose national budget was thus subject to its massive price volatility? Or an ecosocialist torn between the reality of people who are long accustomed to fuel prices kept unsustainably low by implicit energy subsidies and the urgent need to stop smugglers smuggling subsidized fuels out of the country and selling it at much higher prices in neighboring countries? There are no easy answers, are there?
Such is the predicament in which Venezuela’s left-wing government and its supporters find themselves. It is not a job of North American activists to find solutions to the problems in Venezuela, however. Our task, instead, is to help open up the necessary political space and time in which Venezuelans themselves can work out a best course of action under the circumstances and implement it – without interference from the United States government.
Thursday, January 3, 12noon-1pm, 250 E. Wilson Bridge Rd., Worthington, Ohio
Meet outside of U.S. Congressional Representative [District 12] Troy Balderson’s office to support H.R. 1, the pro-democracy bill that will be introduced at the beginning of 2019.
January 3 will mark the first day that our new U.S. Congress will be in session, at which time H.R. 1 will be introduced. This wide-ranging bill aims to restore the Voting Rights Act, end voter suppression, eliminate dark money, counter gerrymandering, promote public campaign finance, and strengthen ethical standards in government.
Meet outside of U.S. Congressional Representative [District 12] Troy Balderson’s Columbus office (Tiberi’s old office in Worthington) at 12noon. Bring your “Rally for Democracy” signs and — even more importantly — bring letters asking Troy Balderson to support H.R. 1.
Please invite your friends to join you in letting Troy Balderson know that we care about preserving our democracy.
Hosted by Indivisible: Ohio District 12.
Columbus s-CREW-ed
“Save the Crew” fanatics are cheering and celebrating that the soccer team is “saved” and staying in Columbus. Their website touts the wonderful “bright new stadium” to be located to the west of the Arena District. But at what cost is this victory?
The original Crew stadium cost $28.5 million, opening in 1999. History-making in its design – as the first soccer-specific stadium built in the United States – its capacity was listed at 19,968 seats last year. Average attendance was 12,447 for the 2018 season, lowest among Major League Soccer (MLS) teams. After taxpayers refused to build a hockey arena and a soccer stadium with public money, billionaire Lamar Hunt had footed the bill for the original Crew stadium.
As the new year begins and the old year ends, we begin another transition in our lives. We make our individual resolutions, our resolutions as couples and as a family. Some of us no longer make resolutions because we have failed to keep, meet or come close to achieving our goals.
To make a resolution is to make a firm decision to do or not to do something. When we make resolutions, we take an action, or at least we say we are going to take an action, to solve a problem, a dispute, or contentious matter. We hope to have “peaceful” resolutions with others so that we can come to a satisfactory agreement, one that will benefit both parties involved, and if necessary, to the benefit of others that we advocate for or who will also benefit from the resolution of the problem.
As I write this article, our government is trying to resolve the issue of building “a wall” that the President of the USA wants to build at the price of five million dollars. Americans are looking at a government shutdown for their new year in 2019. Both the House and the Senate put the battle to rest on December 27 until New Year’s Eve.
Man of the Year 2018: Joe Peppercorn, purveyor of our annual dozen-hour Beatles Marathon at the Blue Stone, an event of such precise performance by him and his merry band of precision players I could've sworn I was in Liverpool's The Cavern or Hamburg's Star-Club or even Shea Stadium 1966.
Oh, and Abbey Road Studio. Joe, his lads and his lasses, did a technically killer job of recreating the George Martin sounds the Fab Four concocted so brilliantly and so seemingly effortlessly.
But absolutely get one thing straight: Marathon #9 was no cheesy stroll down memory lane, trading hollow nostalgia for an actual feeling. The band's superb, sure, but only a true believer could bring the soul of the Beatles to life.
"Anyone who walks into a Huntington [Bank] branch should feel welcomed. … We hold ourselves accountable to the highest ethical standards in how we operate, hire and train colleagues, and interact with the communities we have the privilege of serving." – Statement emailed to CBS MoneyWatch from Huntington Bank on 12/19/18.
Bah Humbug!
Huntington National Bank (HNB) doesn’t discriminate against or mistreat the communities they serve … yeah, right. There’s one distinct group of citizens they don’t want. Those customers risk having their lives turned upside down.
August 17, 2018 seemed like any other summertime Friday. Chores and yard work awaited. The doorbell rang. The mailman handed me a pen to sign a certified letter from Huntington Bank.
Mind you, I was a Huntington Bank customer for 42 years. Wedding checks were deposited into my account as was Social Security. The account paid for kindergarten crayons and college tuition. Never an overdraft or bounced check. By any banking standard, I was a model customer.