Jili slot machine login.Makakuha ng libreng 700pho sa bawat deposito https://www.academytrans.com Shining brightest where it’s dark Thu, 11 Apr 2024 13:52:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.academytrans.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-Kentucky-Lantern-Icon-32x32.png Kenton Hornbeck, Author at Kentucky Lantern https://www.academytrans.com 32 32 Covington breaks ground on mixed-use development at former IRS site https://www.academytrans.com/briefs/covington-breaks-ground-on-mixed-use-development-at-former-irs-site/ Thu, 11 Apr 2024 13:52:35 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?post_type=briefs&p=16546

Covington Mayor Joe Meyer speaking at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Covington Central Riverfront project. (Photo by Kenton Hornbeck | LINK nky)

Nearly two years ago, O’Rourke Wrecking crews busted a hole into the wall of the derelict Internal Revenue Service processing center, which had sat vacant since 2020.

Today, the building’s demolition is complete. The former IRS site is now a barren 23-acre plot awaiting development. The city’s plan is to transform the site into a mixed-use development, complete with offices, housing, retail, a public plaza and parks. Its name? The Covington Central Riverfront project.

The development is part of what Covington Economic Development Director Tom West calls the “$5 billion mile” — a grouping of public and private investments spanning from Covington to Newport that promises to reinvigorate the Northern Kentucky riverfront.

The city hosted a groundbreaking ceremony for the new project on Tuesday, during which city leaders touted its economic viability and potentially transformative impact. Covington Mayor Joe Meyer said the city’s vision was to create a new neighborhood on the site – one that would weave into the existing fabric of the city.

“We saw the opportunity to unwind the urban renewal mindset of the 60s with a vision of the creation of a new neighborhood that would reintegrate with the urban fabric,” Meyer said. “A neighborhood that would complement Mutter Gottes, MainStrasse, Roebling Point and Licking Riverside – a neighborhood that would be authentic, reestablish the urban grid to ensure connectivity, that would be mixed-use, like all the surrounding neighborhoods.”

The IRS processing center was once an economic powerhouse within the city, employing thousands of people. It was promised to the city by then-President John F. Kennedy to Congressman Brent Spence, according to Meyer.

“The IRS center was viewed as Covington’s salvation during the 1960s,” Meyer said. “It promised to bring suburban amenities and a lot of jobs to a city losing its economic base and population to the appeal of suburbanization.”

After 62 years, IRS shut down the center in 2016 due to technological obsolescence in the age of online tax filing. Meyer said the city was “gobsmacked” by the agency’s announcement.

Fast-forward eight years, and Covington is on the verge of undertaking one of the largest economic development projects in the city’s history.

“I think long term, the way we’re approaching this is going to be more sustainable over time,” West said. “It’s going to be a neighborhood again that will become part of that Covington we all love.”

Over the winter, 27,000 cubic yards of fill dirt were moved onto the site to raise its profile to the height of the Ohio River floodwall. Now, Alexandria-based Bray Construction is set to begin building out the development’s horizontal infrastructure, including adding streets, sidewalks, utilities and a public plaza.

The next steps in developing the site’s horizontal infrastructure will be to add an additional 30,000 cubic yards of fill soil, lay new sanitary and storm sewer lines under the entire 23 acres, lay gas, electric, water, and communications lines, restore the street grid between Third and Fourth streets, and build out the median/public plaza space near a new Russell Street promenade.

The first round of infrastructure construction is expected to be completed by September 2025.

“We are excited to take all the planning and hard work done to this point and begin making the project a reality for the city” said Scott Fryman, senior project manager at Bray.

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In March, several key developments regarding the site were published. On March 13, LINK nky reported that Northern Kentucky University’s Chase College of Law and a branch of the University of Kentucky’s College of Medicine could open at the site. A draft of the state’s biennial budget outlined $150 million worth of funding for the project. The legislature approved the appropriation.

Northern Kentucky state Sen. Chris McDaniel (R-Ryland Heights), who chairs the Kentucky Senate Appropriations Committee, spoke at Tuesday’s groundbreaking.

“It has not been a short journey nor an easy one and certainly sometimes the hardest thing is just getting the first shovel in the ground,” McDaniel said.

On March 26, Fort Mitchell-based homebuilder Drees Homes and the City of Covington entered into an agreement to buy land and develop 16 townhomes on a .88-acre block of land.

This story is republished from LINK nky.

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Boone County using opioid settlement funds to create social worker role under the sheriff’s department https://www.academytrans.com/briefs/boone-county-using-opioid-settlement-funds-to-create-social-worker-role-under-the-sheriffs-department/ Mon, 26 Feb 2024 13:00:10 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?post_type=briefs&p=14776

Naloxone (Narcan) nasal spray can reverse the effects of opioid overdoses. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Boone County is set to hire three new workers aimed at addressing the multifaceted challenges posed by the opioid crisis.

On Tuesday, the Boone County Fiscal Court approved a resolution allowing the use of opioid abatement funds to hire up to three police navigators/social workers — a newly created position.

“This is one of the greatest uses of the dollars, overall I would say,” Boone County Judge/Executive Gary Moore said. “The program has tremendous potential in many ways.”

The money comes from a $26 billion settlement between multiple states and some of the United States’ largest pharmaceutical corporations, specifically, drug distributors — McKesson Corp., AmeriSourceBergen and Cardinal Health — and manufacturer Johnson & Johnson. Kentucky received $478 million from the settlement; half of the money was distributed to the state, while the other half went to local government.

Boone County is set to receive an estimated $4.6 million distributed in yearly allotments until 2038, according to a database published by the Kentucky Association of Counties.

To decide how to use the funds, Boone County Administrator Matthew Webster said that throughout 2022 and 2023, county staff consulted with community stakeholders impacted by the opioid epidemic, such as the sheriff’s department, drug court, and the cities of Florence, Walton and Union, among others.

Ultimately, the county created a new position under the sheriff’s department. Laura Pleiman, thedirector of Community Services and Programs for the fiscal court, worked with the sheriff’s department and other community agencies to craft a job description, protocols and plans for the new police navigator/social worker position. The position will be housed under the sheriff’s department.

Webster said the position would provide, “relief to frontline deputies while addressing non-law enforcement issues that currently require the time and attention of sworn officers with a particular emphasis on opioid use and its tangential impacts.”

Moore explained that the workers are there “when law enforcement has stabilized a situation,” but there still needs to be someone present to engage with family members or other present individuals.

The county plans to wait to hire the three staffers; instead, it will hire two in the coming months to adequately develop the program. The position would pay around $78,000 annually, Webster said.

Other police departments in Northern Kentucky already have similar staff positions. Pleiman said the county worked closely with the Alexandria Police Department social workers to develop the position.

“I would say probably that Northern Kentucky is leading the way a lot in this area,” Pleiman said.

This story is republished from LINK nky.

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